Abstract

PurposeDespite increasing legal protections and supportive attitudes toward sexual minorities (e.g., those who identify as lesbian, gay, and bisexual [LGB]) in recent decades, suicidality remains more common among this population than among heterosexuals. While barriers to societal integration—or a lack of meaning, purpose, and belonging as derived from societal norms, goals, and attachment—have been widely theorized as determinants of suicidality for the general population, they have not been comprehensively explored to explain the sexual orientation disparity in suicidality. The aim of this study was to examine differences in suicidal ideation and attempts between LGB and heterosexual individuals in a nationally representative sample, and to examine barriers to societal integration as a potential explanation for any observed disparities over-and-above the influence of established contributors to sexual orientation disparity in suicidality.MethodsData come from the cross-sectional Swedish National Public Health Survey, which collected data from unrestricted random samples of individuals (16–84 years of age) living in Sweden, annually from 2010 to 2015 (n = 57,840 individuals [response rates: 48.1–51.3%]; 1281 (2.2%) self-identified as LGB). Analyses examined sexual orientation differences in suicidality (i.e., past-12-month ideation and attempts), and explored the role of barriers to societal integration (i.e., not living with a partner or children, unemployment, and lack of societal trust) in explaining this disparity over-and-above more commonly explored psychological (e.g., depression, substance use) and interpersonal (e.g., discrimination, victimization, lack of social support) suicidality risk factors.ResultsCompared to heterosexuals, suicidal ideation and attempts were more common among both gay men/lesbians (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] for suicide ideation: 2.69; 95% confidence intervals [CI]: 2.09, 3.47; AOR for suicide attempts: 5.50; 95% CI: 3.42, 8.83), and bisexuals (AOR for suicide ideation: 3.83; 95% CI: 3.26, 4.51; AOR suicide attempts: 6.78; 95% CI: 4.97, 9.24). Barriers to societal integration mediated the association between sexual orientation and suicidality even in models adjusting for established risk factors for suicidality.ConclusionOur results suggest that previously under-examined factors, namely the disproportionate barriers to societal integration that LGB individuals experience, are important contributors to the substantially elevated risk of suicidality among sexual minorities. Preventive interventions should consider innovative ways to foster societal integration within sexual minority populations and to adjust hetero-centric social institutions to better include sexual minority individuals.

Highlights

  • “The bond that unites them with the common cause attaches them to life and the lofty goal they envisage prevents their feeling personal troubles so deeply.”

  • All suggested psychological, interpersonal, and barriers to societal integration risk factors for suicidality were more common as compared to heterosexuals

  • The correlations among all proposed mediator variables are presented in online supplementary Table A. This population-based study suggests that barriers to societal integration represent an under-investigated mechanism of the sizeable sexual orientation disparity in suicidality

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Summary

Introduction

“The bond that unites them with the common cause attaches them to life and the lofty goal they envisage prevents their feeling personal troubles so deeply.”. Other general theoretical models of suicidality have been applied to explain the increased risk among sexual minority individuals [19] Both the clinical model of suicide behavior [20] and the interpersonal theory of suicide [21] emphasize psychological and interpersonal factors such as depression, substance abuse, perceived burdensomeness, loneliness, and thwarted belongingness as important explanatory risks for suicide. The large sample size and representative data permitted us to determine whether barriers to societal integration (i.e., being unmarried/not living with a partner, not having children, being unemployed, and experiencing low societal trust) explain, or partially explain, sexual orientation disparities in suicidality independent of other established suicide risk factors, including psychological (i.e., depression, substance abuse) and interpersonal (i.e., discrimination, victimization, and lack of social support) risks. Findings have potential to expand theoretical and intervention considerations to largely overlooked determinants of this substantial public health problem

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