Sexual minority

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A sexual minority is a group whose sexual identity, orientation or practices differ from the majority of the surrounding society. Primarily used to refer to lesbian, gay, bisexual, or non-heterosexual individuals,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name = CDC2016>Template:Cite web</ref> it can also refer to transgender,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> non-binary (including third gender<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>) or intersex individuals.

Variants include GSM ("Gender and Sexual Minorities"),<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> GSRM ("Gender, Sexual and Romantic Minorities") ,<ref>Template:Citation</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref> and GSD ("Gender and Sexual Diversity").<ref>Organisation proposes replacing the 'limiting' term LGBT with 'more inclusive' GSD, February 25, 2013</ref> They have been considered in academia,Template:Efn but it is SGM ("Sexual and Gender Minority") that has gained the most advancement since 2014.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2015, the NIH announced the formation of the Sexual and Gender Minority Research Office<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and numerous professional<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and academic<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> institutions have adopted this term.

Sexual and gender minority is an umbrella term that encompasses populations included in the acronym "LGBTI" (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex), and those whose sexual orientation or gender identity varies. It includes those who may not self-identify as LGBTI (e.g., queer, questioning, two-spirit, asexual, men who have sex with men, gender variant), or those who have a specific medical condition affecting reproductive development (e.g., individuals with differences or disorders of sex development, who sometimes identify as intersex).<ref>https://www.edi.nih.gov/sites/default/files/EDI_Public_files/sgm-strategic-plan.pdf Template:Bare URL PDF</ref>

Origins

The term sexual minority was most likely coined in the late 1960s under the influence of Lars Ullerstam's book The Erotic Minorities: A Swedish View, which is strongly in favor of tolerance and empathy to paraphilias such as paedophilia and uncommon sexualities in which people were labeled "sex criminals".<ref name=GSM1>Template:Cite web</ref> The term was used as analogous to ethnic minority.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Scientists such as Ritch Savin-Williams support using the term in order to accurately describe adolescent youths who may not identify as any common culturally-defined sexual identity label (lesbian, gay, bisexual, et cetera) but who still have attractions towards those of the same anatomical sex as themselves.<ref name=Savin-Williams1>Savin-Williams, Ritch C. "A critique of research on sexual-minority youths." Journal of adolescence 24.1 (2001): 5-13.</ref>

Associated health and social issues

Stress

Social issues may lead to possible health and psychological issues, especially in youth. It has been found that sexual minorities face increased stress due to stigmas. This stigma-related stress creates elevated coping regulation and social and cognitive processes leading to risk for psychopathology.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite journal</ref>

Risky behavior

The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) published their 2015 study of large cohorts of ninth to twelfth grade students across the US. One hundred health behaviors were shown to put LGB students at risk for health consequences. Sexual minority students engage in more risky behaviors when compared with nonsexual minority students. Some students "...had no sexual contact [and] were excluded from analyses on sexual behaviors [including] female students who had sexual contact with only females [and] were excluded from analyses on condom use and birth control use..." Also excluded were "...male students who had sexual contact with only males [and] were excluded from analyses on birth control use."<ref name = CDC2016/> One small study showed that LGBT adolescents were victimized more often, had higher rates of psychopathology, left home more frequently, used highly addictive substances more frequently, and were more likely to have more multiple sex partners than heterosexual adolescents.<ref name=":0"/>

Development

Based on studies of adolescents, it is concluded that sexual minorities are similar to heterosexual adolescents in developmental needs and concerns. However, research has suggested that sexual minority youth (more specifically LGBT youth) are more susceptible to psychological and health issues than heterosexual youth.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite journal</ref>

Epidemiology

Sexual minorities tend to use alternative and complementary medicine alternative methods of addressing their health needs more often than heterosexuals.<ref name = Blume2016>Template:Cite journal</ref> Sexual minority women have a higher incidence of asthma, obesity, arthritis and cardiovascular disease than other groups.<ref name="SimoniSmith2016">Template:Cite journal</ref>

Adolescent sexual minorities report a higher incidence of the following when compared to heterosexual students:

  • feelings of not being safe travelling to and from school or in school.
  • not going to school because they did not feel safe.
  • forced to do sexual things they did not want to do by someone they were dating or going out with one or more times during the 12 months (touching, kissing, or physically forced to have sexual intercourse)
  • had sexual intercourse.
  • first had sex before age 13.
  • had sex with at least four other people.
  • not using birth control.
  • had experienced sexual violence.<ref name = CDC2016/>

When compared to the general population, sexual minorities have a higher risk for self-injury.<ref name="JackmanHonig2016">Template:Cite journal</ref> The treatment of aging sexual minorities seems to be influenced more by ageism. Support for aging sexual minorities appears to be common.<ref name="McParlandCamic2016">Template:Cite journal</ref>

Discrimination

When gay, lesbian, and bisexual adults reported being discriminated against, forty-two percent credited it to their sexual orientation. This discrimination was positively associated with both harmful effects on quality of life and indicators of psychiatric morbidity.<ref name=":2">Template:Cite journal[16-years old]</ref>

In the media

Sexual minorities are generally portrayed in the mass media as being ignored, trivialized, or condemned. The term symbolic annihilation accounts for their lack of characterization due to not fitting into the white, heterosexual, vanilla type lifestyle. It has been suggested that online media has developed into a space in which sexual minorities may use "social artillery". This description centers on how social networking and connections to oppose instances of homophobia.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Still, some individuals have made their way into the media through television and music. TV shows such as The Ellen DeGeneres Show and ABC's Modern Family star individuals who are open about their non-heterosexual lifestyles. In music, people like Sam Smith and Sia have created songs that express their emotions and sexuality with a number of followers. While sexual minorities do have a place in the media, it is often critiqued that they are still limited in their representations. In shows, if a character is gay, they are often a very shallow character that is only present for comic relief or as a plot twist. Compared to a heteronormative counterpart, the sexual minority is often a mere side-kick. However, since the integration of actors, musicians, and characters of sexual minorities, the idea of non-normativity has become more normalized in society.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Cultural issues

Current and past research has been "skewed toward SM men—and is disproportionately focused on HIV and other sexually transmitted infections." Between 1989 and 2011, numerous grants for research were sponsored and funded by the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) but funded research for sexual minorities and health made up 0.1% of all funded studies. Most research has been directed toward gay and bisexual men. Women sexual minority studies accounted for only 13.5%.<ref name="MullerHughes2016"/>

Sexual minorities in South Africa have sexual-orientation-related health inequities when compared to other countries. One of the highest prevalences of sexual violence directed toward women of a sexual minority occurs in South Africa. Women of color who are living in low income urban areas are notably targeted. The perpetrators of sexual violence believe they are "correcting the women", and their actions will cure them of their homosexuality.<ref name="MullerHughes2016">Template:Cite journal</ref>

Controversy

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Some LGBT people object to using the term sexual minorities and prefer the term LGBT. Reasons for these objections may vary. For example, some LGBT people feel that the term sexual minority reminds them about discrimination and about being a minority. They want to be not a distinct minority but an integral and respectable part of the society. Some other LGBT people dislike the term for being too inclusive, including swingers, polyamorists, BDSM people and other perceived "sexual strangers". These LGBT people want to make a larger distance between these sexual practices and bisexuality/homosexuality/transgender.

Some transgender and transsexual people dislike the term sexual minority for yet another reason. They argue that the phenomenon of transsexuality or transgender has nothing to do with sex, sexual practices or sexual orientation, but it relates to the gender, gender dysphoria and gender-variant behavior or feelings. Thus, they feel it is incorrect to classify them as "sexual minority", when, in fact, they are gender-variant minority.

Some conservative groups oppose the use of the term sexual minority for completely different reasons. They think or feel that the term inherently implies some degree of legalisation or protection for those engaged in such sexual practices, much like ethnic minorities are protected from being discriminated or persecuted in modern democratic countries.

Some people dislike the term because it includes minority, when the fact is that not all these categories are really about minorities but actually about minorised groups.

Others referred to as "sexual minorities" include fetishists and practitioners in of BDSM (bondage, dominance, and submission), and sadism and masochism.<ref name=Savin-Williams1/> The term may also include asexuals<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and people whose choice of partner or partners is atypical, such as swingers,<ref>Rust, Paula C. "The politics of sexual identity: Sexual attraction and behavior among lesbian and bisexual women." Social Problems 39, no. 4 (1992) p. 8 "Sexual minorities are not merely people who engage in 'deviant' sexual behavior—for example, fetishists of various types—or even those that adopt 'deviant' (sexual) identities (e.g. 'swingers')."</ref> polyamorists<ref name="Nichols, Margaret">Nichols, Margaret, and M. I. C. H. A. E. L. Shernoff. "Therapy with sexual minorities." Principles and practice of sex therapy 4 (2000): 353-367.</ref> or people in other nonmonogamous relationships, and those who have partners significantly older or younger than themselves.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> It may also refer to people who are in a mixed-race relationship.

Usually, the term sexual minority is applied only to groups who practice consensual sex: for example, it would be unusual to refer to rapists as a sexual minority, but the term would generally include someone whose sexuality gave a major, fetishized role to consensual playing out of a rape fantasy. Also, someone who very occasionally incorporates of consensual kink<ref name="Nichols, Margaret"/> or same-sex activity into, heterosexual sex life would not usually be described as a sexual minority.

See also

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Explanatory notes

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References

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External links

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