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You are here: Home / MPRC People / Jessica N Fish, Ph.D. / Jessica N Fish Publications / LGBTQ Youth-Serving Community-Based Organizations: Who Participates and What Difference Does it Make?

Jessica N Fish, Raymond L Moody, Arnold H Grossman, and Stephen T Russell (In press)

LGBTQ Youth-Serving Community-Based Organizations: Who Participates and What Difference Does it Make?

Journal of Youth and Adolescence:1-14.

LGBTQ youth are at greater risk for compromised health, yet large-scale health promotion programs for LGBTQ young people have been slow to develop. LGBTQ community-based organizations—which provide LGBTQ-focused support and services—have existed for decades, but have not been a focus of the LGBTQ youth health literature. The current study used a contemporary sample of LGBTQ youth (age 15–21; M = 18.81; n = 1045) to examine who participates in LGBTQ community-based organizations, and the association between participation and self-reported mental health and substance use. Youth who participated in LGBTQ community-based organizations were more likely to be assigned male at birth, transgender, youth of color, and accessing free-or-reduced lunch. Participation was associated with concurrent and longitudinal reports of mental health and substance use. LGBTQ community-based organizations may be an underutilized resource for promoting LGBTQ youth health.

Substance Use, Youth, Fish, Mental Health, LGBTQ, Health, Gender, Health in Social Context, Health Disparities, Gender, Family, and Social Change
Sexual and gender minority, Community programs, Youth, Mental health, Health promotion, Substance use, LGBTQ
First Online: October 12, 2019

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