Brett Caroline E, Madden Hannah, Tillbrook Darci, Hope Vivian D
School of Health in Social Science, The University of Edinburgh, Old Medical School, Teviot Place, Edinburgh EH8 9AG, United Kingdom.
Public Health Institute and School of Public and Allied Health, Liverpool John Moores University, 79 Tithebarn Street, Liverpool L2 2ER, United Kingdom.
Health Promot Int. 2025 Mar 5;40(2). doi: 10.1093/heapro/daaf049.
Salutogenesis and sense of coherence can buffer the effects of external threats such as stigma, discrimination, and emergencies. Lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, and queer (LGBTQ+) communities globally face discrimination, prejudice, and victimization. Understanding salutogenesis and sense of coherence among LGBTQ+ people could improve policy and health promotion responses and reduce the impact of these stressors on LGBTQ+ people's health. This scoping review addressed the following question: To what extent has salutogenesis, either qualitatively or through measurement of sense of coherence, been explored among LGBTQ+ populations globally? Systematic searches of five databases identified 448 unique sources: 413 were excluded through title and abstract screening, and 18 by full-text screening. Of the 17 included studies, 14 were quantitative, two qualitative, and one mixed methods. Studies recruited participants from 11 high-income countries. Two-thirds (11) recruited participants only from within the LGBTQ+ community and six had more broadly based samples. The studies sampled a diverse range of subpopulations and subgroups from a variety of contexts limiting generalizability. The quantitative measure of sense of coherence most often used was the SoC-13 (n = 7), however, heterogeneity in the results reporting prevented quantitative synthesis. The limited evidence suggests that sense of coherence may be lower in LGBTQ+ populations than in comparison groups of cisgender heterosexuals, at least in some contexts, and is related to measures of wellbeing and discrimination. Further research is needed to understand how sense of coherence and its dimensions influence, and is influenced by, LGBTQ + people's life experiences and resources and their responses to external stressors.
健康生成学和连贯感可以缓冲诸如污名、歧视和紧急情况等外部威胁的影响。全球范围内的女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别者和酷儿(LGBTQ+)群体面临着歧视、偏见和受害情况。了解LGBTQ+人群中的健康生成学和连贯感可以改善政策和健康促进措施,并减少这些压力源对LGBTQ+人群健康的影响。本范围综述解决了以下问题:在全球LGBTQ+人群中,健康生成学在多大程度上通过定性研究或连贯感测量进行了探索?对五个数据库的系统检索识别出448个独特来源:413个通过标题和摘要筛选被排除,18个通过全文筛选被排除。在纳入的17项研究中,14项是定量研究,2项是定性研究,1项是混合方法研究。研究从11个高收入国家招募参与者。三分之二(11项)研究仅从LGBTQ+社区内招募参与者,6项研究有更广泛的样本。这些研究从各种背景中对不同的亚群体和子群体进行了抽样,限制了研究结果的普遍性。最常使用的连贯感定量测量方法是SoC-13(n = 7),然而,结果报告的异质性阻碍了定量综合分析。有限的证据表明,至少在某些情况下,LGBTQ+人群的连贯感可能低于顺性别异性恋者的对照组,并且与幸福感和歧视测量相关。需要进一步研究以了解连贯感及其维度如何影响LGBTQ+人群的生活经历和资源以及他们对外部压力源的反应,以及如何受到这些因素的影响。