Question
What is minority stress theory, and how does it help explain the elevated rates of health and wellness disparities observed among LGBTQ+ populations?
Answer
Minority stress theory, developed by researcher Ilan Meyer, proposes that LGBTQ+ individuals face a unique and chronic set of intra- and interpersonal stressors as a direct result of their minority status. Unlike the everyday stressors experienced across the general population, these stressors are specifically tied to living as a stigmatized identity in a society that often marginalizes such individuals. The cumulative weight of these stressors is theorized to contribute to poorer physical and mental health outcomes at rates exceeding those typically observed in majority populations.
Interpersonal stressors include overt forms of discrimination, such as being denied services or subjected to microaggressions in the workplace or healthcare settings, as well as broader policy-based discrimination that may not involve a direct interpersonal encounter. Intrapersonal stressors, which can be less visible but equally impactful, include the internal distress that can arise from acknowledging a stigmatized identity in oneself, fear, shame, and confusion that may develop even before any external discrimination occurs. One particularly significant intrapersonal stressor is internalized homophobia or transphobia, wherein an LGBTQ+ individual begins to absorb and believe the negative messages communicated by the culture around them.
Since its introduction, minority stress theory has served as the foundation for thousands of studies in LGBTQ+ health research. It has since been expanded to account for additional intersecting identities such as race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status, which may compound stress experiences. Understanding this theory provides clinicians with a research-grounded framework for contextualizing the disproportionate rates of mental health concerns, substance use, and healthcare avoidance that LGBTQ+ clients may present with in clinical settings.
This Ask the Expert is an edited excerpt from the course, "Providing Behavioral Health Treatment to LGBTQ+ Populations: Introductory Ethical and Clinical Considerations," presented by Andrew Arriaga, PsyD.