AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how minority stress impacts intimate partner violence (IPV) among sexual and gender minorities assigned female at birth (SGM-AFAB) using data over 3.5 years from 488 participants.
  • Microaggressions correlated with both experiencing and perpetrating various types of IPV, notably psychological and coercive control, while SGM victimization also related to IPV but not in the same direct manner.
  • The findings suggest that addressing minority stress, particularly through understanding microaggressions, is important for clinicians working with SGM-AFAB individuals in relationships.

Article Abstract

Objective: Sexual and gender minorities assigned female at birth (SGM-AFAB) experience high rates of intimate partner violence (IPV). Using multiwave longitudinal data, the present study tested the following associations of minority stress and IPV among SGM-AFAB: concurrent within-person (i.e., whether changes in minority stress with changes in IPV), prospective within-person (i.e., whether changes in minority stressors changes in IPV), and between-persons (i.e., whether individuals who experience more minority stress, on average, experience more IPV).

Method: Data were from Waves 1-7 (spanning 3.5 years) of a longitudinal cohort study of 488 young SGM-AFAB. At each wave, participants reported on SGM victimization, sexual orientation microaggressions, internalized heterosexism, and five types of IPV for up to three partners in the past six months.

Results: Controlling for other minority stress experiences, microaggressions showed concurrent within-person associations with two types of IPV victimization (psychological and coercive control) and three types of IPV perpetration (psychological, physical, and sexual), and between-persons associations with psychological IPV victimization and coercive control victimization and perpetration. Microaggressions also had a significant prospective within-persons association with SGM-specific IPV perpetration. SGM victimization showed no unique within-person associations with IPV but, between-persons, was associated with all types of IPV victimization (except coercive control), and psychological and sexual IPV perpetration. Internalized heterosexism was not associated with any IPV outcome.

Conclusions: Minority stress, particularly distal stressors, appear to contribute to risk for IPV among SGM-AFAB. Clinicians working with SGM-AFAB individuals in relationships may benefit from screening for experiences of minority stress.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10691836PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/vio0000466DOI Listing

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