A new study from Columbia University's Mailman School of Public
Health has found that lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) individuals living
in areas with high levels of anti-gay prejudice live, on average, 12
years less than LGB individuals living in areas of low anti-gay
prejudice. The study is the first of its kind to examine a link between
mortality and and anti-gay prejudice. From the University’s Press release:
The authors also found that suicide,
homicide/violence, and cardiovascular diseases were all substantially
elevated among sexual minorities in high-prejudice communities. LGB
respondents living in high-prejudice communities died of suicide on
average at age 37.5, compared to age 55.7 for those living in
low-prejudice communities, a striking 18-year difference. Homicide and
violence-related deaths are one of the most direct links between hostile
community attitudes and death, and results indicated that homicide
rates were over three times more likely to occur in high-prejudice
communities than in low-prejudice communities.
Of the deaths in high-prejudice
communities, 25% were due to cardiovascular disease, compared to 18.6%
of deaths in the low-prejudice communities. "Psychosocial stressors are
strongly linked to cardiovascular risk, and this kind of stress may
represent an indirect pathway through which prejudice contributes to
mortality. Discrimination, prejudice, and social marginalization create
several unique demands on stigmatized individuals that are
stress-inducing," said Dr. Hatzenbuehler.
The study is also remarkable not just in its conclusions but also in
its methods, particularly in the way it quantifies prejudice within a
community. As “Dr. Hatzenbuehler points out, the community-level measure
of prejudice does not rely on sexual minorities' perceptions of how
stigmatizing their communities are, but rather was based on the
prejudicial attitudes of all respondents living in that community.”
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