Abstract
In the United States, the experience of minority stress among LGBTQ+ youth varies across regions with high and low levels of stigma (e.g., laws, policies, and cultural norms that limit the lives of individuals with stigmatized identities). Some evidence suggests that stigma can undermine response to individual-level psychosocial interventions among youth, creating the need to identify factors that may buffer against minority stressors’ effects in high-stigma contexts. Social support may be one such factor. Therefore, among LGBTQ+ youth who received a digital, single-session intervention (SSI) focused on minority stress, we investigated whether structural and internalized stigma and social support predicted intervention response, independently or interactively. Specifically, we predicted that LGBTQ+ youth in environments characterized by high stigma would report weaker SSI responses. Further, we predicted that LGBTQ+ youth who perceived higher social support would report stronger SSI responses. We also tested structural stigma and social support as moderators. Using data from a previously-completed randomized evaluation, we analyzed data from 244 LGBTQ+ adolescents, aged 13–16 years, across 181 counties in 46 U.S. states, who engaged with the SSI. We created a factor representing structural stigma using confirmatory factor analysis at the county level. No evidence emerged for structural stigma or social support as a moderator of intervention effects on internalized stigma, identity pride, or mental health-related outcomes, either at post-intervention or at 2-week follow up. Results speak to the potentially broad utility of the SSI tested in this trial for LGBTQ+ youth with limited access to mental health support.
| Original language | English (US) |
|---|---|
| Article number | 100409 |
| Journal | SSM - Mental Health |
| Volume | 7 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Jun 2025 |
Funding
Outside of the present project, JLS has received funding from the National Institutes of Health Office of the Director (DP5OD028123), National Institute of Mental Health (R43MH128075), the Upswing Fund for Adolescent Mental Health, the National Science Foundation (2141710), Health Resources and Services Administration (U3NHP45406-01-00), the Society for Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, HopeLab, Child Mind Institute, and the Klingenstein Third Generation Foundation. Preparation of this article was supported in part by the Implementation Research Institute (IRI), at the George Warren Brown School of Social Work, Washington University in St. Louis; through an award from the National Institute of Mental Health ( R25MH080916 ; JLS is an IRI Fellow). JLS serves on the Scientific Advisory Board for Walden Wise and the Clinical Advisory Board for Koko; has received consulting fees from UnitedHealth, Woebot, Kooth, and TikTok; is co-founder and co-director of Single Session Support Solutions; and receives book royalties from New Harbinger, Oxford University Press, and Little, Brown Book Group.
Keywords
- Adolescents
- Depression
- LGBTQ+
- Minority stress
- Single session interventions
- Structural stigma
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
- Psychology (miscellaneous)