Abstract

Considerable research has been undertaken regarding the mental health inequalities experienced by lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI+) youth as a consequence of societal and individual prejudice, stigma and discrimination. Far less research has focussed on protective factors that promote wellbeing for this population. A scoping review was conducted using a six-stage methodological framework, and is reported in accordance with the PRISMA-ScR statement. This explored the extent, range and nature of the peer-reviewed, published, academic literature on what is known about the protective factors that promote LGBTI+ youth wellbeing. Six databases were systematically searched applying Population–Concept–Context key inclusion criteria, complemented by contact with authors to identify additional sources, reference checks and hand searches. Ninety-six individual research records were identified and analysed, drawing from Honneth’s Recognition Theory. Interpersonal relations with parents (n = 40), peers (n = 32) and providers (n = 22) were associated with indicators of enhanced wellbeing, as were LGBTI+ community relations (n = 32). Importantly, online (n = 10), faith (n = 10) and cultural (n = 5) communities were potentially protective. Content and thematic analysis highlighted the importance of Gay–Straight Alliances (GSAs) (n = 23) offering powerful protective opportunities through intersecting interpersonal, community and legal forms of recognition. GSAs enhance allyship by peers and providers (n = 21), facilitate access to LGBTI+ community networks (n = 11) and co-exist alongside inclusive policies (n = 12), curricular (n = 5) and extracurricular activities (n = 1). This scoping review underscores the need to move beyond the predominant focus on risk factors for LGBTI+ youth, which subsequently inform protectionist approaches. It concludes with an appeal to develop mechanisms to apply recognitive justice to policy, practice and, importantly, future research directions. This emphasises the salience of enhanced understandings of inclusion, which is rights-based, universally available and of potential benefit to all.

Highlights

  • Sex development is a spectrum of variations that occur within humanity, including intersex youth [8]

  • This review identified potential for the presence of accepting faith communities to be a source of support for LGBTI+ youth [68,73,90,114,127,133,134,135,136,137]

  • The findings contained in this scoping review demonstrate that, rather than an LGBTI+ identity being assumed as a proxy for risk, there is a pressing need to attend to specific psychosocial strengths rather than the predominant focus on stressors for this population

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Summary

Introduction

Gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI+) populations, the concept of wellbeing has generated considerable research interest over many decades [4]. Gender minority youth and those with diverse sex development using the LGBTI+ acronym appears straightforward: “L” equates to lesbian; “G” to gay; “B” to bisexual; “T” to transgender and “I” to intersex. The LGBTI+ acronym comprises three dimensions, sexual orientation, gender identity and sex development, with wide variations and diversity of expression, for youth [5]. Behaviour and attraction, with suggestions of a greater lifetime prevalence of same-gender behaviour and attraction than identification [6], and higher prevalence of an LGBTI+ identification for youth, with young people more likely to identify as bisexual [7]. Explain why the review questions/objectives lend themselves to a scoping review approach.

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