Abstract

Sexual minority women face a plethora of structural, socioeconomic, and interpersonal disadvantages and stressors. Research has established negative associations between women’s sexual minority identities and both their own health and their infants’ birth outcomes. Yet a separate body of scholarship has documented similarities in the development and well-being of children living with same-sex couples relative to those living with similarly situated different-sex couples. This study sought to reconcile these literatures by examining the association between maternal sexual identity and child health at ages 5–18 using a US sample from the full population of children of sexual minority women, including those who identify as mostly heterosexual, bisexual, or lesbian, regardless of partner sex or gender. Analyses using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (N = 8978) followed women longitudinally and examined several measures of their children’s health, including general health and specific developmental and physical health conditions. Analyses found that children of mostly heterosexual and bisexual women experienced health disadvantages relative to children of heterosexual women, whereas the few children of lesbian women in our sample evidenced a mixture of advantages and disadvantages. These findings underscore that to understand sexual orientation disparities and the intergenerational transmission of health, it is important to incorporate broad measurement of sexual orientation that can capture variation in family forms and in sexual minority identities.

Highlights

  • A growing body of research has aimed to document children’s experiences in the context of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) families (Reczek, 2020)

  • We examine how having a mother who identifies as a sexual minority is related to a set of children’s health outcomes that includes both overarching and specific measures of general, developmental, and physical health

  • We examined how having a mother who identifies as a sexual minority was associated with a variety of children’s health outcomes

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Summary

Introduction

A growing body of research has aimed to document children’s experiences in the context of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) families (Reczek, 2020). A large proportion of LGBT individuals in the United States are parents: Six million adults and children report having a LGBT parent (Gates, 2011), and more than a quarter of households headed by a female-female couple have a child under 18 in the household (Gates, 2011). It is unlikely that the proportion of LGBT adults having children will decrease, and it may continue to increase, for at least two reasons. There have been increases in same-sex behavior and identification in recent years (England et al, 2016). Pregnancy rates among sexual minorities—people who identify as mostly heterosexual, bisexual, or lesbian or report same-sex behavior or attraction—will continue to increase. In a 2007 community-based study, 91% of sexual minority women reported seeing themselves having children in the future (D’Augelli et al, 2007)

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