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DTSTART:20241103T020000
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DTSTART:20250309T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Program: LGBTQ Health Caucus Session: Interpersonal and struct
 ural violence within LGBTQ+ populations Authors: Bryce P Takenaka\, Adam 
 Viera\, E. Jennifer Elelman\, Trace Kershaw See all authors and presenter
 s → Abstract Objectives To identify patterns of perceived reasons for exp
 eriencing discrimination and how those profiles relate to discrimination 
 experiences and health and social outcomes. Methods Men's Voices on Mappi
 ng\, Neighborhoods\, and Technology (MVMNT) was a longitudinal cohort stu
 dy conducted between June 2019 and March 2023. This study included 396 yo
 ung gay\, bisexual men\, and non-binary individuals from Connecticut and 
 Georgia and completed the Everyday Discrimination scale about their discr
 iminatory experiences and perceived reasons for those experiences. We con
 ducted a latent class analysis and identified four distinct classes based
  on perceived reasons for discrimination. ANOVAs tested differences in he
 alth outcomes across classes. Results The Multifaceted Class (10%) includ
 ed sexuality\, race\, ethnicity\, gender\, weight\, dress\, skin color\, 
 and hair as perceived reasons for discrimination. The Race and Ethnicity 
 Class (22%) included sexuality\, race\, and ethnicity. The Sexuality Only
  Class (46%) had sexuality as the sole reason for discrimination. Lastly\
 , the External Appearance Class (22%) included sexuality\, weight\, dress
 \, and hair. Discrimination scores were significantly higher for the Exte
 rnal Appearance Class compared to the Race and Ethnicity and Sexuality On
 ly classes (p<0.001). Stigma salience\, body esteem\, social cohesion\, p
 erceived stress\, social anxiety\, depression\, harmful alcohol use\, and
  use of criminalized substances differed significantly by class (p<0.05).
  Conclusion Health promotion programs providing long-term solutions\, suc
 h as alternative care systems\, anti-discrimination measures\, and suppor
 tive coping strategies\, are recommended to mitigate the negative effects
  of stigma and improve health outcomes.\n\nSpeakers:\nBryce Takenaka\; Ad
 am Viera\; Trace Kershaw\; E. Jennifer Elelman\n\nAdmission:\nRegistratio
 nFees: APHA Event Registration is Required\n\nDetails URL:\nhttps://medic
 ine.yale.edu/event/experiences-of-discrimination-among-young-gay-bisexual
 -men-and-non-binary-individuals/\n
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251104T171500
DTSTAMP:20260418T113339Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251104T170000
GEO:38.903500;-77.022987
LOCATION:801 Allen Y Lew Pl NW\, Washington\, DC\, United States
SEQUENCE:0
STATUS:Confirmed
SUMMARY:4327.0 - Experiences of discrimination among young gay\, bisexual 
 men\, and non-binary individuals: Latent Class Analysis
UID:0f8dbef4-e812-4927-a5db-191557de81b9
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