Mental health, sexual identity, and interpersonal violence: Findings from the Australian longitudinal Women’s health study

Background: We examined the relationships among experiences of interpersonal violence, mental health, and sexual identity in a national sample of young adult women in Australia. Methods: We used existing data from the third (2003) wave of young adult women (aged 25- 30) in the Australian Longitudina...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Szalacha, Laura A., Hughes, Tonda L., McNair, Ruth, Loxton, Deborah
Other Authors: Univ Arizona, Coll Nursing
Language:en
Published: BIOMED CENTRAL LTD 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/626105
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/626105
id ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-626105
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-6261052017-11-19T03:00:29Z Mental health, sexual identity, and interpersonal violence: Findings from the Australian longitudinal Women’s health study Szalacha, Laura A. Hughes, Tonda L. McNair, Ruth Loxton, Deborah Univ Arizona, Coll Nursing Interpersonal violence Female sexual identity Stress Depression Australian longitudinal Women's health study Background: We examined the relationships among experiences of interpersonal violence, mental health, and sexual identity in a national sample of young adult women in Australia. Methods: We used existing data from the third (2003) wave of young adult women (aged 25- 30) in the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health (ALSWH). We conducted bivariate analyses and fit multiple and logistic regression models to test experiences of six types of interpersonal violence (physical abuse, severe physical abuse, emotional abuse, sexual abuse, harassment, and being in a violent relationship), and the number of types of violence experienced, as predictors of mental health. We compared types and number of types of violence across sexual identity subgroups. Results: Experiences of interpersonal violence varied significantly by sexual identity. Controlling for demographic characteristics, compared to exclusively heterosexual women, mainly heterosexual and bisexual women were significantly more likely to report physical, sexual, and emotional abuse. Mainly heterosexual and lesbian women were more likely to report severe physical abuse. Mainly heterosexual women were more than three times as likely to have been in a violent relationship in the past three years, and all three sexual minority subgroups were two to three times as likely to have experienced harassment. Bisexual women reported significantly higher levels of depression than any of the other sexual identity groups and scored lower on mental health than did exclusively heterosexual women. In linear regression models, interpersonal violence strongly predicted poorer mental health for lesbian and bisexual women. Notably, mental health indicators were similar for exclusively heterosexual and sexual minority women who did not report interpersonal violence. Experiencing multiple types of interpersonal violence was the strongest predictor of stress, anxiety and depression. Conclusions: Interpersonal violence is a key contributor to mental health disparities, especially among women who identify as mainly heterosexual or bisexual. More research is needed that examines within-group differences to determine which subgroups are at greatest risk for various types of interpersonal violence. Such information is critical to the development of effective prevention and intervention strategies. 2017-09-30 Article Mental health, sexual identity, and interpersonal violence: Findings from the Australian longitudinal Women’s health study 2017, 17 (1) BMC Women's Health 1472-6874 28964264 10.1186/s12905-017-0452-5 http://hdl.handle.net/10150/626105 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/626105 BMC Women's Health en http://bmcwomenshealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12905-017-0452-5 © The Author(s). 2017 Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. BIOMED CENTRAL LTD
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Interpersonal violence
Female sexual identity
Stress
Depression
Australian longitudinal Women's health study
spellingShingle Interpersonal violence
Female sexual identity
Stress
Depression
Australian longitudinal Women's health study
Szalacha, Laura A.
Hughes, Tonda L.
McNair, Ruth
Loxton, Deborah
Mental health, sexual identity, and interpersonal violence: Findings from the Australian longitudinal Women’s health study
description Background: We examined the relationships among experiences of interpersonal violence, mental health, and sexual identity in a national sample of young adult women in Australia. Methods: We used existing data from the third (2003) wave of young adult women (aged 25- 30) in the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health (ALSWH). We conducted bivariate analyses and fit multiple and logistic regression models to test experiences of six types of interpersonal violence (physical abuse, severe physical abuse, emotional abuse, sexual abuse, harassment, and being in a violent relationship), and the number of types of violence experienced, as predictors of mental health. We compared types and number of types of violence across sexual identity subgroups. Results: Experiences of interpersonal violence varied significantly by sexual identity. Controlling for demographic characteristics, compared to exclusively heterosexual women, mainly heterosexual and bisexual women were significantly more likely to report physical, sexual, and emotional abuse. Mainly heterosexual and lesbian women were more likely to report severe physical abuse. Mainly heterosexual women were more than three times as likely to have been in a violent relationship in the past three years, and all three sexual minority subgroups were two to three times as likely to have experienced harassment. Bisexual women reported significantly higher levels of depression than any of the other sexual identity groups and scored lower on mental health than did exclusively heterosexual women. In linear regression models, interpersonal violence strongly predicted poorer mental health for lesbian and bisexual women. Notably, mental health indicators were similar for exclusively heterosexual and sexual minority women who did not report interpersonal violence. Experiencing multiple types of interpersonal violence was the strongest predictor of stress, anxiety and depression. Conclusions: Interpersonal violence is a key contributor to mental health disparities, especially among women who identify as mainly heterosexual or bisexual. More research is needed that examines within-group differences to determine which subgroups are at greatest risk for various types of interpersonal violence. Such information is critical to the development of effective prevention and intervention strategies.
author2 Univ Arizona, Coll Nursing
author_facet Univ Arizona, Coll Nursing
Szalacha, Laura A.
Hughes, Tonda L.
McNair, Ruth
Loxton, Deborah
author Szalacha, Laura A.
Hughes, Tonda L.
McNair, Ruth
Loxton, Deborah
author_sort Szalacha, Laura A.
title Mental health, sexual identity, and interpersonal violence: Findings from the Australian longitudinal Women’s health study
title_short Mental health, sexual identity, and interpersonal violence: Findings from the Australian longitudinal Women’s health study
title_full Mental health, sexual identity, and interpersonal violence: Findings from the Australian longitudinal Women’s health study
title_fullStr Mental health, sexual identity, and interpersonal violence: Findings from the Australian longitudinal Women’s health study
title_full_unstemmed Mental health, sexual identity, and interpersonal violence: Findings from the Australian longitudinal Women’s health study
title_sort mental health, sexual identity, and interpersonal violence: findings from the australian longitudinal women’s health study
publisher BIOMED CENTRAL LTD
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/626105
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/626105
work_keys_str_mv AT szalachalauraa mentalhealthsexualidentityandinterpersonalviolencefindingsfromtheaustralianlongitudinalwomenshealthstudy
AT hughestondal mentalhealthsexualidentityandinterpersonalviolencefindingsfromtheaustralianlongitudinalwomenshealthstudy
AT mcnairruth mentalhealthsexualidentityandinterpersonalviolencefindingsfromtheaustralianlongitudinalwomenshealthstudy
AT loxtondeborah mentalhealthsexualidentityandinterpersonalviolencefindingsfromtheaustralianlongitudinalwomenshealthstudy
_version_ 1718562348547964928