Correlates of depressed mood among young stimulant-using homeless gay and bisexual men

A Nyamathi, C Branson, F Idemundia… - Issues in Mental …, 2012 - Taylor & Francis
A Nyamathi, C Branson, F Idemundia, C Reback, S Shoptaw, M Marfisee, C Keenan
Issues in Mental Health Nursing, 2012Taylor & Francis
Homeless gay and bisexual (G/B) men are at risk for suicide attempts and have high risk of
depressed mood, defined as elevated level of depressive symptoms. This study describes
baseline socio-demographic, cognitive, psychosocial, and health-and drug-related
correlates of depressed mood in 267 stimulant-using homeless G/B young men who entered
a study designed to reduce drug use. G/B men without social support were 11 times more
likely to experience depressed mood than their counterparts who had support; those who …
Homeless gay and bisexual (G/B) men are at risk for suicide attempts and have high risk of depressed mood, defined as elevated level of depressive symptoms. This study describes baseline socio-demographic, cognitive, psychosocial, and health- and drug-related correlates of depressed mood in 267 stimulant-using homeless G/B young men who entered a study designed to reduce drug use. G/B men without social support were 11 times more likely to experience depressed mood than their counterparts who had support; those who reported severe body pain were almost six times more likely to report depressed mood than those without pain. Other factors that increased risk of depressed mood included being homeless in the last four months, injecting drugs, reporting poor or fair health status, and high levels of internalized homophobia. This study is one of the first studies to draw a link between pain experienced and depressed mood in homeless young G/B men. Understanding the correlates of depressed mood among homeless G/B young men can help service providers design more targeted treatment plans and provide more appropriate referrals to ancillary care services.
Taylor & Francis Online
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果