Intersectional Microaggressions and Implications for Health Inequities and HIV Among Latino/x Sexual Minority Males in Puerto Rico
Publication Date
1-1-2024
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities
DOI
10.1007/s40615-023-01900-2
Abstract
Latino/x sexual minority males (SMM) continue to be disproportionately impacted by health inequities. This study aims to understand the lived experience of Puerto Rican (PR) SMM related to how intersectional microaggressions influence health-related risk and protective factors. Young adult (ages 21–30) PR SMM from San Juan, Puerto Rico, completed a bilingual in-depth individual interview (14 in Spanish and 1 in English). A thematic analysis based on the original language of the interviews was conducted using NVivo. Six prominent themes were identified through the data analysis: (1) religious microaggressions, being gay is bad because God doesn’t like it; (2) gender microaggressions, gay is not good because it’s not for men; (3) sexuality microaggressions, this one is a homosexual, coming out as a sexual minority; (4) trans microaggressions, drag queens create an illusion; (5) internalized microaggressions, battling with internalized homophobia; and (6) mitigating microaggressions, establishing a supportive community. Findings suggest that multiple forms of microaggressions based on the intersectionality of sexuality and gender manifest from straight as well as gay communities. PR SMM demonstrated their resiliency by assessing interactions with others to mitigate risks and enhance supportive networks.
Funding Number
2R25MH087217-06
Funding Sponsor
National Institute of Mental Health
Keywords
HIV, Intersectionality, Latino/x SMM, Microaggressions, Qualitative research, Sexual minorities
Department
Social Work
Recommended Citation
Moctezuma Garcia. "Intersectional Microaggressions and Implications for Health Inequities and HIV Among Latino/x Sexual Minority Males in Puerto Rico" Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40615-023-01900-2