Effect of Concealment and Outness of Gender and Sexual Orientation on Self Esteem in Lgbtqia+ Individuals

Thryaksha Ashok Garla1

1

Publication Date: 2022/03/15

Abstract: The present study experimentally investigated the effect of concealment and outness of a person’s sexual orientation and gender identity on their self-esteem. This was strictly restricted to LGBTQIA+ individuals. A survey was taken using online platforms, and the participants (N=289) were asked a series of questions in order to measure their concealment using the ‘Sexual Orientation Concealment Scale’, their outness using the ‘Outness Inventory’ and their self-esteem using the ‘Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale’. The results display an obvious effect, with the self-esteem being directly proportional to their outness and indirectly proportional to their concealment. While factors such as parental support, depression and anxiety are frequently studied in LGBTQIA+ individuals, self-esteem and outness rarely are. This study has severe implications, taking into account that a person’s self-esteem might take a huge hit even if they have accepted themselves, due to them having to be closeted. It necessitates the need for a community, for psychoeducation of the masses and for establishing ways in order to help the individual come out, previously largely being focused on self-acceptance alone.

Keywords: Self-esteem, Outness, Concealment, LGBTQIA+

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6354879

PDF: https://ijirst.demo4.arinfotech.co/assets/upload/files/IJISRT22FEB644.pdf

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