The impact of civil union legislation on minority stress, depression, and hazardous drinking in a diverse sample of sexual-minority women: A quasi-natural experiment
posted on 2017-01-17, 00:00authored byTonda L. Hughesc, Mark L. Hatzenbuehlerb, Bethany G. Everetta
Rationale: A small but growing body of research documents associations between structural
forms of stigma (e.g., same-sex marriage bans) and sexual minority health. These studies,
however, have focused on a limited number of outcomes and have not examined whether
sociodemographic characteristics, such as race/ethnicity and education, influence the relationship
between policy change and health among sexual minorities.
Objective: To determine the effect of civil union legalization on sexual minority women’s
perceived discrimination, stigma consciousness, depressive symptoms, and four indicators of
hazardous drinking (heavy episodic drinking, intoxication, alcohol dependence symptoms,
adverse drinking consequences) and to evaluate whether such effects are moderated by
race/ethnicity or education.
Methods: During the third wave of data collection in the Chicago Health and Life Experiences
of Women study (N=517), Illinois passed the Religious Freedom Protection and Civil Union Act,
legalizing civil unions in Illinois and resulting in a quasi-natural experiment wherein some
participants were interviewed before and some after the new legislation. Generalized linear
models and interactions were used to test the effects of the new legislation on stigma
consciousness, perceived discrimination, depression, and hazardous drinking indicators.
Interactions were used to assess whether the effects of policy change were moderated by
race/ethnicity or education.
Results: Civil union legislation was associated with lower levels of stigma consciousness,
perceived discrimination, depressive symptoms, and one indicator of hazardous drinking
(adverse drinking consequences) for all sexual minority women. For several other outcomes, the
benefits of this supportive social policy were largely concentrated among racial/ethnic minority
women and women with lower levels of education.
Conclusions: Results suggest that policies supportive of the civil rights of sexual minorities
improve the health of all sexual minority women, and may be most beneficial for women with
multiply marginalized statuses.
Funding
This study is supported by the U.S. National Institutes of Health and Office of Research on Women's Health (ORWH) grant K12HD055892, U.S. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)/National Institutes of Health (NIH) Grant No. R01 AA13328 (T. L. Hughes, Principal Investigator), and by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) K01DA032558. Note: the content is the sole responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of NIAAA or NIH.