A new study published in the Journal of Youth aimed to examine the ways chronic stress and discrimination shape mental health and substance use among young sexual minority men living in New York City.
“The aim was to tease apart how everyday experiences such as stigma connect with issues like anxiety, depression, PTSD, and substance use,” Kristen D. Krause told us. Krouse is the Deputy Director of the Center for Health, Identity, Behavior and Prevention Studies where the research was housed. “Ultimately, the study hoped to capture just how these stressors impact well-being day to day, not just as abstract risks but as lived realities. »
The analysis was guided by the minority stress framework, which suggests that sexual minority individuals encounter specific stressors that accumulate and negatively impact mental health outcomes. Drawing on previous research and the lived experiences of community members, the researchers anticipated a correlation between discrimination, stress, and elevated rates of anxiety, depression, and substance use.
“This topic was chosen as there are notable gaps in understanding what support looks like for young sexual minority men and how interventions should address both social and psychological factors,” Krause told us. “The study used survey tools validated for measuring stigma, discrimination, and internalized homophobia, plus scales for anxiety, depression, and PTSD.”
Substance use was tracked with a detailed 30-day timeline follow-back interview. Participants came back every six months over the course of three years, which allowed the researchers to observe how things changed over time in relation to the different stressors, rather than relying on just one time point of observation.
“Results indicated that discrimination, internalized homophobia, and perceived stress were strong predictors of mental health symptom severity, especially for depression and PTSD,” Krause told us. “Patterns of substance use were most closely linked with perceived stress, while certain types of discrimination appeared to reduce involvement in club drug environments.”
Additionally, Black non-Hispanic participants displayed lower severity in some mental health outcomes, a result that may reflect the presence of social support and community context rather than reduced stress exposure.
“One surprising outcome was the degree to which external discrimination predicted poorer mental health compared to more internal stressors,” Krause told us. “This complexity highlights the importance of paying attention to individual narratives rather than relying on averages.”
The findings underscore the importance of interventions and policies that address the root causes of discrimination while fostering protective support systems, with a dual aim to diminish risks and promote resilience.
“Public health efforts should emphasize the development of social support networks and peer engagement, acknowledge a diversity of lived experiences, and take into account how stressors function in large urban settings, such as NYC,” Krause told us.