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Internalizing symptoms and affective vulnerability among heterosexual and sexual minority young adults

Abstract

Objectives

Sexual minority young adults report higher rates of anxiety and depression, and affective vulnerability factors (i.e. anxiety sensitivity, distress tolerance, emotion dysregulation) may help explain these mental health disparities.

Design

The current cross-sectional study examined differences between sexual minority and heterosexual college students (n = 465; M
age = 19.84, SD = 3.51; 76.3% female) in anxiety, depression and affective vulnerability and whether affective vulnerability served as an explanatory mechanism in these associations.

Methods

Participants completed self-report measures for course credit.

Results

Sexual minority young adults reported greater anxiety, depression, anxiety sensitivity, emotion regulation difficulties and lower distress tolerance. There were also significant indirect effects for all three affective vulnerability variables for anxiety symptoms and for emotion regulation difficulties for depression symptoms.

Conclusions

Affective vulnerability, particularly emotion regulation difficulties, appears to serve as a mechanism through which sexual minority status is associated with anxiety and depression. Improving emotion regulation skills may help to reduce mental health disparities in this population.

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 02/03/2025 | Link to this post on IFP |
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