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Coping and Psychological Distress Among Genderqueer Individuals: The Moderating Effect of Social Support
Authors:Stephanie L. Budge  H. Kinton Rossman  Kimberly A. S. Howard
Affiliation:1. Department of Educational and Counseling Psychology , University of Louisville , Louisville , Kentucky , USA;2. Department of Educational Foundations, Leadership, and Counseling , Boston University , Boston , Massachusetts , USA
Abstract:This study examined the relationships between social support, coping, depression, and anxiety in a sample of genderqueer individuals (n = 64). Genderqueer is a label used within the broader transgender community and is defined as a gender identity that is outside the binary construct of male and female. Findings indicate that 53% (n = 34) of participants reported clinical levels of depression and 39% (n = 25) reported clinical levels of anxiety. There was a direct relationship between social support and depression and anxiety, indicating that more social support is associated with less depression and anxiety when statistically excluding coping factors. In addition, more facilitative coping (e.g., seeking help) was related to less anxiety, whereas more avoidant coping (e.g., avoiding emotions) was related to more anxiety and depression. There was a significant interaction between social support and coping factors when predicting anxiety, such that individuals who reported higher social support used more facilitative coping which was associated with less anxiety and those who reported less social support used more avoidant coping which was associated with more anxiety. Clinical implications for working with genderqueer-identified clients are discussed.
Keywords:anxiety  coping  depression  gender identity  genderqueer
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