1 / 18

Purpose

Adolescent client responses to sexual orientation questions in the GAIN: What can we learn, what can we do. Gillian Leichtling RMC Research Corporation Joint Meeting on Adolescent Treatment Effectiveness December 14-16, 2010. Purpose.

vicki
Download Presentation

Purpose

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Adolescent client responses to sexual orientation questions in the GAIN: What can we learn, what can we do Gillian LeichtlingRMC Research CorporationJoint Meeting on Adolescent Treatment EffectivenessDecember 14-16, 2010

  2. Purpose • Utilize data from adolescent treatment assessments to explore: • What questions should be asked about sexual orientation when youth are assessed for treatment? • How can clients’ responses to sexual orientation questions be used to inform the treatment provided to them?

  3. Sample • Dataset of youth attending federally-funded adolescent treatment programs across the U.S. that use the Global Appraisal of Individual Needs (GAIN) biopsychosocial treatment assessment. • As of 2008, the GAIN includes items addressing sexual orientation along three key dimensions: behavior, identity, and attraction. • Sexual behavior items are part of the required set of assessment questions for CSAT adolescent treatment grantees. • Identity and attraction items are optional. Some grantee agencies choose to use the items while others do not. • Study includes assessment data for youth who were asked all 3 sexual orientation questions (N = 2,342).

  4. Sexual Orientation Items in the GAIN • Behavior • During the past 12 months, did you…have sex with a male partner?Have sex with a female partner? • Identity • Which of the following labels best fits how you would describe your sexual orientation identity? Nonsexual or asexual/ heterosexual or straight/ homosexual, gay, or lesbian/ bisexual/ questioning or curious/ not sure • Attraction • Do you currently have significant sexual or romantic attractions mostly to...the opposite sex/ the same sex/ both males and females/ neither males or females/ not sure?

  5. Why Ask 3 Questions about Sexual Orientation? • Incongruence between differing aspects of sexual orientation is not uncommon. E.g., youth may report: • Same-sex sexual experiences with no LGBQ identity • Same-sex identity with no same-sex experiences • Same-sex attraction with no same-sex experiences • Asking only 1 question may fail to identify LGBQ youth. • Incongruent responses to the 3 questions may indicate internal struggles around identity formation or integration.

  6. LGB Disclosure Rates by Gender • Percentage of youth in sample classifed as LGB based on responses to GAIN items: 6.9% (161/ 2,329*). • Variation in disclosure rates by gender: • Male disclosure rates extremely low (1.7%) compared to females (18.8%). • Male disclosure rate low compared to male LGB disclosure rates in adolescent general population surveys (conducted anonymously) • Female disclosure rate higher than in adolescent general population surveys. Note that in surveys conducted to date, lesbian/bi females report higher substance use than heterosexual females (Marshal et al., 2008). Could explain overrepresentation in treatment. *13 removed from original sample of 2,342 due to possible response errors.

  7. LGB Disclosure Rates by Race/Ethnicity • Variation in disclosure rates by race/ethnicity: • African-American clients had lowest disclosure rates (4.6%) while those in Mixed/Multiracial and Other categories had highest (11.8%; 12.5%). Note: A longitudinal study showed delayed identity integration (e.g., participation in gay social activities, disclosure to others) for African-American LGB youth (Rosario et al., 2004).

  8. Why Disclosure Matters for Treatment • High rates of victimization, suicide risk; potential family support issues; other issues critical to address in treatment • Impact of shame, isolation, deception on treatment progress • Disclosure rates could indicate level of internal comfort; could also indicate level of comfort created by the treatment agency. • Older studies show engagement and compliance may be higher when clients perceive providers as gay-affirmative (Paul et al 1991, O’Hanlan et al 1997, Liddle 1997).

  9. Enhancing Disclosure Rates • Steps counselors can take to increase disclosure rates and create a positive recovery environment for LGBTQ clients: • Ask about LGB behavior, identity, and attraction. Opens door for the topic and shows counselor comfort in discussing. • Stay open to learning different/additional information as treatment progresses. • Respond to homophobia expressed by clients. Negative experiences with other group treatment participants can interfere with services. • Agency-wide practices important: policies, staff training, presentation as LGBT-friendly, e.g., display of LGBT-friendly posters/brochures, inclusion of LGBTQ in service literature. (Center for Substance Abuse Treatment, 2001)

  10. Incongruent Responses to Behavior, Identity, and Attraction items • Examination of the degree of concordance in youth responses to GAIN items across the 3 dimensions was conducted to explore the following questions: • Do the CSAT-required behavioral items adequately identify LGBQ youth at baseline assessment or are the additional questions on identity/attraction necessary? • Are incongruent responses an indicator of earlier stage of identity development?

  11. Comparing Responses to 3 GAIN Items • Overall LGB disclosure rates: 6.9% (161/ 2,329)*. • Looking only at the required behavior question, LGB disclosure rates were lower: 4.5% (104/2329) • More than 1/3 of LGB youth were not identified by behavior question alone *Including Questioning or Not Sure youth with no other LGB dimensions would add 13 youth, for a disclosure rate of 7.4% (174/2,329)

  12. Is Age a Factor in Incongruent Responses? • LGB youth whose behavior, identity, and attraction were aligned (concordance across 3 dimensions) were older than youth with incongruent responses.

  13. What Can “Incongruence” Tell Us? • Internal and external barriers (e.g., internalized homophobia, lack of support, victimization) may delay some youth from developing a consistent LGB identity (Carragher & Rivers, 2002; Rosario et al., 2001). • Identity integration process and substance use trajectory may be linked– more research needed. • Bisexual youth may experience more cognitive dissonance than gay/lesbian youth and may take a longer period of time to form and integrate their sexual identity (Rosario et al., 2001). • Bisexual youth (especially bisexual females) report particularly elevated substance abuse risk (Marshall et al., 2008; Corliss et al., 2010).

  14. What Can We Do If Incongruence or Possible Internal Struggles are Identified? • Discussion: • Can we ask questions from a different angle to re-open the topic obliquely?E.g., family support, close friendships, experience with harassment. • Are there community resources we can offer? E.g., discussion group for questioning youth, counselor with expertise, gay/straight social group such as Gay-Straight Alliance • What other issues are important to discuss and particularly relevant to treatment progress?E.g., impact of multiple identities (such as ethnic/cultural identities), relationship between feelings of shame and substance use, social environment and support network, safety.

  15. Conclusions • If providers ask only the CSAT-required behavior questions and do not include the optional sexual orientation questions (particularly the identity question), they may fail to identify more than a third of LGB youth. • Questions at assessment may under-identify males and African Americans. • Considerations: • Providers can take steps to increase youth comfort in disclosing and discussing sexual orientation. • Incongruent responses raise red flag about potential internal discomfort. • Addressing internal challenges (e.g., shame, suicidal ideation) and external challenges (e.g., victimization, family censure) relevant to treatment effectiveness for LGB youth.

  16. References • Carragher, D.J., Rivers, I. (2002). Trying to Hide: A Cross-National Study of Growing Up for Non-Identified Gay and Bisexual Male Youth. Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 7:3, 1359–1045. • Center for Substance Abuse Treatment. (2001). A provider's introduction to substance abuse treatment for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender individuals. Rockville, MD: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. • Corliss H.L., Rosario, M., Wypij, D., Wylie, S.A., Frazier, A.L., Austin, S.B. (2010) Sexual orientation and drug use in a longitudinal cohort study of U.S. adolescents. Addictive Behaviors, 35(5), 517-21. • Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual (LGB) Youth Sexual Orientation Measurement Work Group. Measuring Sexual Orientation of Young People in Health Research. San Francisco, CA: Gay and Lesbian Medical Association, 2003.

  17. References (continued) • Marshal, M.P., Friedman, M.S., Stall, R., King, K.M., Miles, J., Gold, M.A., Bukstein, O.G., Morse, J.Q. (2008). Sexual orientation and adolescent substance use: a meta-analysis and methodological review. Addiction. 103(4), 546-56. • Pathela, P., Blank, S., Sell, R.L., Schillinger, J.A. (2006) The importance of both sexual behavior and identity. American Journal of Public Health, 96(5). • Rosario, M., Schrimshaw, E.W., Hunter, J. (2004). Ethnic/racial differences in the coming-out process of lesbian, gay, and bisexual youths: a comparison of sexual identity development over time. Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology. 10(3), 215-28. • Rosario, M., Schrimshaw, E.W., Hunter, J., Braun, L. (2006). Sexual identity development among lesbian, gay, and bisexual youths: consistency and change over time. Journal of Sex Research.

  18. Questions? • Gillian LeichtlingRMC Researchgleichtling@rmccorp.com503.223.8248

More Related