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Sexual Minority Youth, Social Change, and Health: A Developmental Collision
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Few societal attitudes and opinions have changed as quickly as those regarding sexual minority people and rights. In the context of dramatic social change, there have been multiple policy changes toward social inclusion and rights for lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) people, and perceptions that the sociocultural context for LGB people—perhaps particularly for youth—has improved. Yet recent evidence from the developmental sciences points to paradoxical findings: in many cases there have been growing rather than shrinking health disparities. The authors suggest that there is a developmental collision between normative adolescent developmental processes and sexual minority youth identities and visibility.
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MPRC People
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Jessica N Fish, Ph.D.
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Jessica N Fish Publications
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Cigarette Smoking Among Youth at the Intersection of Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity
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Abstract Purpose: The purpose of this study was to identify subgroups of sexual and gender minority (SGM) youth who are most vulnerable to tobacco use. Methods: We analyzed data from a national nonprobability sample of 11,192 SGM youth (ages 13–17). Age of cigarette initiation and current use were modeled using Cox proportional hazard and binomial regression. Sexual and gender identities were explanatory variables and the models were adjusted for ethnoracial identity and age. Results: Approximately 7\% of the sample reported current smoking. Cisgender and transgender boys had higher odds of current smoking compared with cisgender and transgender girls (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 1.86; 95\% confidence interval [CI]: 1.56–2.21). Pansexual-identified youth had higher odds of smoking (AOR = 1.33; 95\% CI: 1.05–1.70) compared with gay/lesbian youth independent of gender identity. Pansexual-identified cisgender boys had the highest smoking prevalence (21.6\%). Predicted probabilities were higher among transgender boys across all sexual identities, except asexual. The hazard of smoking at a younger age was greater for transgender boys compared with cisgender boys (adjusted hazard ratio [AHR] = 1.67; 95\% CI: 1.43–1.94) as well as for bisexual (AHR = 1.12; 95\% CI: 1.01–1.24) and pansexual (AHR = 1.17; 95\% CI: 1.03–1.33) youth compared with those who identified as gay or lesbian. Conclusions: These findings suggest that transgender boys may be at higher risk for early and current cigarette use regardless of their sexual identity, whereas smoking varied more widely for youth across different sexual identities. The findings suggest that specific subgroups of SGM youth require focused attention in tobacco control research and practice.
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MPRC People
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Jessica N Fish, Ph.D.
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Jessica N Fish Publications
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Li Liu, Johns Hopkins University
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Misclassification between stillbirths and neonatal deaths in low-income countries
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Coming Up
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Maureen Cropper comments on new climate plan
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The new Clean Power plan will leave Americans worse off
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News
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Jessica Fish, UMD Family Science
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Sexual minority population health inequities across the life course: Where do we go from here?
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Coming Up
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Uchechi Mitchell, University of Illinois at Chicago
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When is Hope Enough? Hopefulness, Discrimination and Racial Disparities in Physiological Dysregulation
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Coming Up
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Theodore Joyce, Baruch College
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The Impact of Parental Involvement Laws on the Abortion Rate of Minors
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Coming Up
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Michael White, Brown University
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Migration, Urbanization, and Health: Insights from South Africa
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Coming Up
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Amanda Geller, New York University
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Police Contact, Mental Health, and Health Disparities among Urban Teens
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Coming Up
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Steven Haas, Penn State University
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The Long-Arm of Conflict: How Timing Shapes the Long-term Impacts of Childhood Exposure to War
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Coming Up