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Harassment and Mental Distress Among Adolescent Female Students by Sexual Identity and BMI or Perceived Weight Status
Author(s) -
Johns Michelle Marie,
Lowry Richard,
Demissie Zewditu,
Robin Leah
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
obesity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.438
H-Index - 199
eISSN - 1930-739X
pISSN - 1930-7381
DOI - 10.1002/oby.21850
Subject(s) - sexual minority , overweight , harassment , sexual identity , psychology , sexual orientation , lesbian , mental distress , clinical psychology , mental health , youth risk behavior survey , obesity , demography , medicine , human sexuality , poison control , psychiatry , suicide prevention , social psychology , gender studies , environmental health , sociology , psychoanalysis
Objective Sexual minority girls (lesbian/bisexual) and girls with overweight/obesity experience high rates of discrimination and mental distress. This study explored whether BMI or perceived weight status might compound sexual minority girls’ risk for harassment and mental distress. Methods Data on female students from the national 2015 Youth Risk Behavior Survey ( n = 7,006) were analyzed. Logistic regression was used to examine differences in bullying, harassment, and mental distress across sexual identity/BMI groups: heterosexual/normal‐weight, heterosexual/overweight, sexual minority/normal‐weight, and sexual minority/overweight. Procedures were repeated with four analogous groups created from sexual identity and perceived weight. Results Across sexual identity/BMI groups, being overweight increased heterosexual females’ odds of being bullied or experiencing suicidal thoughts and behaviors. Regardless of weight status, sexual minority females had greater odds for each outcome than heterosexual females. Sexual minority females who perceived themselves as overweight had greater odds of suicidality than all other sexual minority/perceived weight groups. Conclusions Double jeopardy may exist for sexual minority female students who perceive themselves as overweight. Professional development with school staff on how to create a positive climate for sexual minorities and those with overweight/obesity and addressing positive identity and body image within school‐based suicide prevention efforts may be important to the well‐being of adolescent girls.