Revitalized LGBT Mental Health Community

We’ve relaunched the LGBT Mental Health Community on the HealthyPlace website. You’ll find over 100 new articles and videos dealing with gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender mental health and related issues that are important to the LGBT community. Not only do we discuss gay mental health in detail, but there’s also plenty of information on where to find gay support, gay support groups and organizations. Other topics include gay bullyinggay suicide, and things you should consider before coming out at work. Plus we have articles that address parents of gay children and some of the issues they face. We invite you to take a look.

We are also looking for a new blogger to write on LGBT and mental health issues. Could you be that person? More info here.

Related Articles

Hate Crimes

Xiomara A. Sosa, Clinical Mental Health-Forensic Counselor (scholar-practitioner)

Mental Health and Wellness Coach

www.xasconsulting.com

xasosa@xasconsulting.com

The FBI publishes annual hate crime statistics. However, according to a Department of Justice study done in 2005 it was found that the majority of hate crimes don’t get reported to the police. The ones that are usually do not fall into the category of hate crime by local jurisdictions (Potok, 2010).

The Southern Poverty Law Center estimates the rates of victimization by different targeted minority groups. They calculate these rates by first determining the percentage of the U.S. population represented by each minority victim group. Sexual minorities were calculated at 2.1% according to the Census Bureau’s 2009 Statistical Abstract. Of the percentages calculated, the percentage of sexual minorities in the United States is the mostly debated. The center uses numbers from self-identified gays, lesbians and bisexuals found in the National Health and Social Life Survey.

These figures are also cited by a coalition of 31 leading gay rights organizations as the most widely accepted study in America. “2.1% proportion is calculates from the finding that 2.8% of men and 1.4% of women are sexual minorities” (Potok, 2010).

15,351 anti-homosexual hate crimes were estimated to have been committed in a 14 year range. This amounts to 17.4% of their total hate crimes calculated for reported hate crimes of all 6 minority groups studied.  It was also calculated that sexual minorities are victimized at 8.3 times the rate of other minority groups. Sexual minorities suffer violent crime at a significantly higher rate than all other minority groups combined. This community is much more likely than other minority groups to be victims of violent hate crimes in America than other minority group (Potok, 2010).

In the last 30 years it has been a central theme for Christian Right groups to oppose equal rights for gays and lesbians. Christian Right leaders believe that the gay rights movement and its “homosexual agenda” are directly responsible for the destruction of culture and the American society. The founder of Focus on the Family, James Dobson, said “”the battle against gay rights is second civil war to put control of the U.S. government in the right hands, meaning those who reject gay rights”. Their leaders regularly participate in extremely crude name-calling as they describe the gay community as “perverts with filthy habits who seek to snatch the children of straight parents and convert them to gay sex”. They perpetuate these verbal attacks by disseminating extremely negative, untrue “facts” about the sexual minority community. These assertions are alarmingly similar to what white intellectuals and scientists wrote about the “bestial” black man and his supposedly threatening sexuality in the past (Potok, 2010).

Such anti-gay movements fuel hate and violence against an entire minority group. Since the time that President George H.W. Bush signed the Hate Crime Statistics Act in 1990, hate crimes against the sexual minority community and perceived homosexuals in the United States have been of concern. Scores of studies have consistently found that gays and lesbians face a much higher prevalence of violent crime than any other minority group in the United States. These attacks are more savage in nature and the horrible murder of Matthew Shepard in 1998 was pivotal in facing that fact. The FBI’s statistics confirm that violence against this community is faced daily in this country (Potok, 2010).

“ Analyzing 14 years of hate crime data in this issue, the Intelligence Report found that gays and lesbians are more than twice as likely to be attacked in a violent hate crime as Jews or blacks; more than four times as likely as Muslims; and 14 times as likely as Latinos”.  Yet we still have religious leaders, politicians and pundits willing to perpetuate this hateful violence but defaming the gay community with falsehoods about them and suggested even death and legislating discrimination against them.  Suicide in the community among young gay community members is indicative of the psychological damage brought on by such hate and prejudice. The gay equal rights movement does not seek to force Christians or others to abandon their belief about homosexuality. However, proposing criminality, discrimination, and lying about the gay community by demonizing them with extremely offensive falsehoods is unacceptable (Potok, 2010).

Intervention for hate crimes against the sexual minority community should include heightened public awareness and promotion of more understanding of the nature and epidemiology of hate crimes. Confronting how hate crimes are perpetuated by public and private entities and aiming to change those actions must be part of any prevention and intervention strategy. Developing databases of hate crimes against the gay community on a national level as well as the success of educational programs to mediate this crime can help reduce the prevalence of hate crimes against sexual minorities. Mental health professionals have a crucial role in the prevention and intervention of hate crimes and should practice intervention in all communities affected by hate crimes, including hate crimes against the gay community (Potok, 2010).

References:  

Allen, K. P. (2010). A bullying intervention system: Reducing risk and creating support for aggressive students. Preventing School Failure, 54(3), 199-209.

Isaacs, T. (2001). Domestic violence and hate crimes: Acknowledging two levels of responsibility. Criminal Justice Ethics, 20(2), 31-43.

James, K., Richard (2008). Crisis in schools (6th ed.). Crisis intervention strategies. (p. 410). Belmont, CA: Thompson Brooks/Cole

Potok, Mark (2010). Intelligence report (No.140), The Southern Poverty Law Center

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Health, Behavior And Identity Are The Focus Of Bisexuality Studies

Bisexuality, often stigmatized, typically has been lumped with homosexuality in previous public health research. But when Indiana University scientists recently focused on the health issues and behaviors specific to behaviorally bisexual men and women, they found tremendous variety, and that commonly used labels, such as heterosexual and homosexual, can sometimes do more harm than good.

Bisexual, gay, lesbian, queer, men who have sex with men (MSM), women who have sex with women (WSW) — these are just some of the terms commonly used to characterize sexual partnering and attraction in recent research. Behavioral science researchers have long known that socially constructed sexual identity “labels” (like “gay”) are often not always reflective of the diversity and complexity of an individual’s sexual behaviors. A study led by Vanessa Schick, assistant research scientist at the Center for Sexual Health Promotion at IU Bloomington, found that how women relate to their label could influence their health.

Schick’s study involved 2,578 women who reported a history of attraction or sexual encounters with women. The Web-based survey asked about mental, physical and sexual wellness. In the paper “Bidentity: Sexual Behavior/Identity Congruence and Women’s Sexual, Physical and Mental Well-Being,” Schick reports finding that the women who identified themselves as bisexual or lesbian reported the best health when their sexual identity matched their recent sexual history.

Schick, however, warned against interpreting this as evidence that women should declare a sexual identity that corresponds to their sexual behavior. Instead, she points to the experiences of women who labeled themselves as “queer,” a sexual identity that is sometimes endorsed by individuals who want to reject traditional labels that suggest the gender of their sexual partners.

“Unlike the other women in the study, the mental, physical and sexual well-being of queer-identified women was not related to the gender of their recent sexual partners,” she said.

“This suggests that, instead of encouraging women to adopt labels that are more descriptive of their behavior, we should be more flexible in the behavioral expectations that we attach to these labels.”

For a variety of reasons, men and women often identify openly or just to themselves with a label that is different from their sexual history. One such reason is biphobia, the stigma and discrimination that bisexual individuals experience from both heterosexual and homosexual individuals.

Brian Dodge, associate professor in the School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation and associate director of the Center for Sexual Health Promotion, found in his study on sexual health among bisexual men that factors associated with biphobia contributed to feelings of isolation and social stress reported by many of his study participants. Dodge’s qualitative study, which is funded by the National Institutes of Health, is based on in-depth interviews with 75 bisexual men from the Indianapolis area, ages 19 to 70, equally divided among Latino participants, non-Latino black participants and non-Latino white participants.
“There have been large quantitative studies that examined the mental health status of men who have sex with both men and women,” Dodge said, “but no one has sat down and talked with these men about it. When we did, men were saying explicitly that being bisexual, not having a community to be involved with, not having people they could disclose to, homosexual or heterosexual, was tied to their experiences of adverse mental health.”

These are just some of the findings in the special issue of Journal of Bisexuality. Guest edited by Dodge and Schick, the special issue includes articles that stray from the more typical focus on sexual risk and sexually transmitted infections and covering topics including physical health and wellness, sexual health, and mental health among people whose identities or behaviors indicate bisexuality. Researchers contributing to the issue come from such institutions as Emory University, George Mason University, Columbia University, George Washington University and the IU School of Medicine.

“The issue gives a nice snapshot of how diverse bisexuality is among both men and women,” Dodge said.

Here are more findings from Dodge’s and Schick’s studies:

  • Schick’s paper “Variations in the Sexual Repertoires of Bisexually Identified Women in the United States and the United Kingdom” examined the diversity of sexual behavior reported by bisexual women. When looking at their recent sexual experiences, the women were divided almost evenly as having no recent sexual partners, having only a male sexual partner, only a female sexual partner, or both male and female sexual partners. This study involved 710 bisexually identified women, making it one of the largest studies of its kind. “Like all people, bisexual women are living their sexual lives in diverse ways,” Schick said. “Some women may choose to have both male and female partners while others may engage in sexual behavior with only men or women. Other bisexually identified women may decide not to have any sexual partners at all. They don’t simply fit into one mold. This contradicts the hypersexualized representations of bisexual women that we often find within the media.”
  • For both papers in the special issue, Schick and her research team gathered more detailed information than other studies because of the variety of questions asked. Instead of asking whether they used a sex toy, for example, they asked about five different kinds of toys. When they asked about behaviors such as oral sex, they asked who was giving and receiving separately for men and women. Overall, they found that bisexual women tended to engage in parallel behaviors with men and women. In other words, they were similarly as likely to engage in oral sex with a male partner as they were to engage in oral sex with a female partner.
  • In Dodge’s study, men were asked to report a wide range of sexual behaviors with both male and female partners based on measures developed for the National Survey of Sexual Health and Behavior, a recent study conducted by the Center for Sexual Health Promotion examining the sexual behaviors and experiences of a nationally representative sample of more than 6,000 individuals in the United States. Such detailed data on the specific oral, vaginal, anal and other sexual behaviors in which these men engage with both male and female partners have been absent from scientific literature. The paper “Sexual Behaviors and Experiences Among Behaviorally Bisexual Men in the Midwestern United States: Implications for Interventions,” written by postdoctoral research fellow Omar Martinez of the HIVCenter for Clinical and Behavioral Studies at Columbia University, explores the unique sexual behaviors and experiences of bisexual Latino men in the study.
  • In Dodge’s paper “Individual and Social Factors Related to Mental Health Concerns Among Bisexual Men in the Midwestern United States,” participants reported mental health concerns tied to both individual and social struggles associated with being bisexual, particularly the isolation and lack of support and perceived stigma associated with bisexuality among men. They reported feeling they would automatically receive negative reactions from both homosexual and heterosexual family, friends and other people in their social networks. As a result, participants were not likely to disclose their bisexuality, further increasing their invisibility and isolation.
  • In large part, men in Dodge’s study tended to use condoms with male partners for HIV/STI prevention purposes and with female partners for pregnancy prevention purposes. Women were seen as being “safer” in terms of STI transmission risk. In the paper “Subjective Sexual Experiences of Behaviorally Bisexual Men in the Midwestern United States: Sexual Attraction, Sexual Behaviors and Condom Use,” authored by IU doctoral candidate Phillip Schnarrs, participants describe the patterns and meanings of their sexual repertoires with both male and female partners.

Dodge said a better understanding of men’s sexual behaviors and experiences will lead to more effective health programming for bisexual men and their male and female sexual partners.

“Because the content of most current sexual health programs for gay and bisexual men focus only on their behaviors and experiences with male partners, interventions are urgently needed that are specifically tailored to the wide range of sexual behaviors and experiences which bisexual men share with both male and female partners,” he said.

Indiana University

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/245920.php

 

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World Health Organization Releases Groundbreaking Report Condemning Conversion Therapies for Sexual Minorities (GLBT)

Xiomara A. Sosa, XAS Founder & Principal

From Pan American Health Organization

Washington, D.C., 17 May 2012 (PAHO/WHO) — Services that purport to “cure” people with non-heterosexual sexual orientation lack medical justification and represent a serious threat to the health and well-being of affected people, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) said in a position statement launched on 17 May, the International Day against Homophobia. The statement calls on governments, academic institutions, professional associations and the media to expose these practices and to promote respect for diversity.

From Pan American Health Organization

Washington, D.C., 17 May 2012 (PAHO/WHO) — Services that purport to “cure” people with non-heterosexual sexual orientation lack medical justification and represent a serious threat to the health and well-being of affected people, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) said in a position statement launched on 17 May, the International Day against Homophobia. The statement calls on governments, academic institutions, professional associations and the media to expose these practices and to promote respect for diversity.

Twenty two years ago, on May 17, the World Health Assembly removed homosexuality from the list of mental disorders when it approved a new version of the World Health Organization’s International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10).

“Since homosexuality is not a disorder or a disease, it does not require a cure. There is no medical indication for changing sexual orientation,” said PAHO Director Dr. Mirta Roses Periago. Practices known as “reparative therapy” or “conversion therapy” represent “a serious threat to the health and well-being—even the lives—of affected people.”

The PAHO statement notes that there is a professional consensus that homosexuality is a natural variation of human sexuality and cannot be regarded as a pathological condition. However, several United Nations bodies have confirmed the existence of “therapists” and “clinics” that promote treatment intended to change the sexual orientation of non-heterosexual people.

The document notes that no rigorous scientific studies demonstrate any efficacy of efforts to change sexual orientation. However, there are many testimonies about the severe harm to mental and physical health that such “services” can cause. Repression of sexual orientation has been associated with feelings of guilt and shame, depression, anxiety, and even suicide.

As an aggravating factor, there have been a growing number of reports about degrading treatments, and physical and sexual harassment under the guise of such “therapies,” which are often provided illicitly. In some cases, adolescents have been subjected to such interventions involuntarily and even deprived of their liberty, sometimes kept in isolation for several months.

“These practices are unjustifiable and should be denounced and subject to sanctions and penalties under national legislation,” said Dr. Roses. “These supposed conversion therapies constitute a violation of the ethical principles of health care and violate human rights that are protected by international and regional agreements.”

To address the problem, PAHO makes a series of recommendations for governments, academic institutions, professional associations, the media, and civil society, including:

• “Conversion” or “reparative” therapies and the clinics offering them should be denounced and subject to adequate sanctions.

• Public institutions responsible for training health professionals should include courses on human sexuality and sexual health in their curricula, with a focus on respect for diversity and the elimination of attitudes of pathologization, rejection, and hate toward non-heterosexual persons.

• Professional associations should disseminate documents and resolutions by national and international institutions and agencies that call for the de-psychopathologization of sexual diversity and the prevention of interventions aimed at changing sexual orientation.

• In the media, homophobia in any of its manifestations and expressed by any person should be exposed as a public health problem and a threat to human dignity and human rights.

• Civil society organizations can develop mechanisms of civil vigilance to detect violations of the human rights of non-heterosexual persons and report them to the relevant authorities. They can also help to identify and report people and institutions involved in the administration of “reparative” or “conversion therapies.”

PAHO, which celebrates its 110th anniversary this year, is the oldest public health organization in the world. It works with its member countries to improve the health and the quality of life of the people of the Americas. It also serves as the Regional Office for the Americas of WHO.

LINKS: “Cures” for an illness that does not exist Link:

http://new.paho.org/paho110/

http://www.paho.org

http://www.facebook.com/PAHOWHO

http://www.youtube.com/pahopin

http://twitter.com/pahoeoc

http://twitter.com/pahowho

http://twitter.com/opsoms

Media Contacts:

Leticia Linn, linnl@paho.org, Tel. + 202 974 3440, Mobile +1 202 701 4005, Donna Eberwine-Villagran, eberwind@paho.org, Tel. +1 202 974 3122, Mobile +1 202 316 5469, Sonia Mey-Schmidt, maysonia@paho.org, Tel. + 1 202 974 3036, Mobile +1 202 251 2646, Knowledge Management and Communications, PAHO/WHO–www.paho.org

http://www.dayagainsthomophobia.org/Media-Release-World-Health,1557

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Official Statement Concerning Homosexuality from the American Counseling Association

Xiomara A. Sosa, XAS Founder

The American Counseling Association has a division called the “Association for Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Issues in Counseling”. Its mission is as follows:

Mission Statement

The mission of the Association for Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Issues in Counseling is to educate mental health service providers about issues confronting gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLBT) individuals. We believe that all individuals should be free to develop their full potential regardless of sexual orientation and gender identity, and that professional counselors must understand the unique ways gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgendered individuals experience inequality and injustice resulting from discrimination and prejudice.

From the mission statement for the Association for Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Issues in Counseling.

“Reparative Therapy”

The American Counseling Association has adopted a resolution that states that it: “opposes portrayals of lesbian, gay, and bisexual youth and adults as mentally ill due to their sexual orientation; and supports the dissemination of accurate information about sexual orientation, mental health, and appropriate interventions in order to counteract bias that is based on ignorance or unfounded beliefs about same-gender sexual orientation.” [Resolution adopted by American Counseling Association Governing Council, March 1998.] Further, at its 1999 World Conference, ACA adopted a position opposing the promotion of “reparative therapy” as a “cure” for individuals who are homosexual. [Action by American Counseling Association Governing Council, April 1999.]

Taken from The American Psychological Association Online Fact Sheet — Just the Facts About Sexual Orientation & Youth: A Primer for Principals, Educators and School Personnel.

 

http://www.clgs.org/official-statement-concerning-homosexuality-american-counseling-association

Xiomara A. Sosa, XAS Founder

‘Coming out’ as gay, lesbian or bisexual may be good for your health, particularly when parental support is involved.

A comprehensive new study led by Boston University School of Public Health (BUSPH) researcher Emily Rothman shows that two-thirds of lesbian, gay and bisexual adults in a representative Massachusetts sample reported receiving positive support from their parents after coming out to them.

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/243995.php

Xiomara A. Sosa, XAS Founder

Gay affirmative psychotherapy is a form of psychotherapy for gay and lesbian clients which encourages them to accept their sexual orientation, and does not attempt to change them to heterosexual, or to eliminate or diminish same-sex desires and behaviors. The American Psychological Association (APA) offers guidelines and materials for gay affirmative psychotherapy. Affirmative psychotherapy states that homosexuality or bisexuality is not a mental illness. In fact, embracing and affirming gay identity can be a key component to recovery from other mental illnesses or substance abuse. There are a number of individuals for whom neither gay-affirmative therapy nor conversion therapy might be appropriate, however. Clients whose religious beliefs teach against homosexual behavior may require some other method of integration of their conflicting religious and sexual selves.

Gay Affirmative Therapy (GAT) takes the position that there is nothing inherently wrong with being gay or lesbian.What’s wrong is what is done to gay men and lesbians by a homophobic, homo-ignorant society and heterosexist therapy. Living in a shame-based culture creates a variety of behavioral and psychological disorders. GAT focuses on repairing the harm done to these clients, helping them move from shame to pride.

http://www.gayaffirmativetherapy.com/default.asp?id=1158

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gay_affirmative_psychotherapy

 

 

The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Concerns Office (LGBTCO) advances psychology as a means of improving the health and well-being of LGBT people, of increasing understanding of gender identity and sexual orientation as aspects of human diversity, and of reducing stigma, prejudice, discrimination, and violence toward LGBT people.

http://www.apa.org/pi/lgbt/index.aspx

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Do You Crave Spontaneous Happiness?

It’s natural to have emotional ups and downs. What’s not natural – yet all too common in the modern world – is to feel persistently sad or anxious for no obvious reason. My new website, SpontaneousHappiness.com, helps members find and sustain the emotional balance that’s needed to navigate and enjoy life in this complex, fast-paced world. In just eight weeks you will:

  • Learn how ancient therapies – including specialized forms of meditation – can bring peace and serenity.
  • Discover foods and supplements that can improve emotional stability.
  • Explore the role of exercise in boosting mood.
  • Feel better physically. The practices that help you achieve emotional well-being are also good for your body!

Weekly checklists, personalized tips, in-depth articles, and videos provide a variety of ways to keep you engaged and encouraged. In addition, we have tools to track your mood, breathing, physical fitness and other aspects of your personal journey through the plan.Visit today to learn more about Spontaneous Happiness – I think you will find it a useful tool for achieving balance in the hectic world we live in today.

 Copyright © 2011 Weil Lifestyle, LLC