Event Title

Affective well-being, stigma, & campus non-responsiveness

Project Type

Completed quantitative research study

Primary Department

Clinical Psychology

Description

Research suggests experiencing religious anti-gay prejudice leads to greater levels of anxiety, shame, and abuse by students. Given its non-affirming religiously-oriented stance, we investigated such phenomena at SPU. A parallel mediation suggests LGBTQIA+ students have lower affective well-being than cis-hetero counterparts. This relationship is partially mediated by perceptions of campus non-responsiveness. The model accounted for 10% of the variance in campus non-responsiveness, 9.7% in stigma, and 14% in affective well-being. A pairwise comparison of the indirect effects supported they are statistically significantly different from each other (B = 0.116, SE = 0.056, p = 0.039, 95CI = 0.010 to 0.234).

Comments

This poster was also presented at the Annual Meeting of the Western Psychological Association, Riverside, CA, April 2023

Copyright Status

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Additional Rights Information

Copyright held by author(s).

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May 31st, 3:00 PM

Affective well-being, stigma, & campus non-responsiveness

Research suggests experiencing religious anti-gay prejudice leads to greater levels of anxiety, shame, and abuse by students. Given its non-affirming religiously-oriented stance, we investigated such phenomena at SPU. A parallel mediation suggests LGBTQIA+ students have lower affective well-being than cis-hetero counterparts. This relationship is partially mediated by perceptions of campus non-responsiveness. The model accounted for 10% of the variance in campus non-responsiveness, 9.7% in stigma, and 14% in affective well-being. A pairwise comparison of the indirect effects supported they are statistically significantly different from each other (B = 0.116, SE = 0.056, p = 0.039, 95CI = 0.010 to 0.234).

Rights Statement

In Copyright