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Culture, Health & Sexuality
An International Journal for Research, Intervention and Care
Volume 23, 2021 - Issue 1
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Articles

Mental health and structural harm: a qualitative study of sexual minority men’s experiences of mental healthcare in Toronto, Canada

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Pages 98-114 | Received 19 Jun 2019, Accepted 08 Nov 2019, Published online: 03 Dec 2019
 

Abstract

Compared to the general population, sexual minority men report poorer mental health outcomes and higher mental healthcare utilisation. However, they also report more unmet mental health needs. To better understand this phenomenon, we conducted qualitative interviews with 24 sexual minority men to explore the structural factors shaping their encounters with mental healthcare in Toronto, Canada. Interviews were analysed using grounded theory. Many participants struggled to access mental healthcare and felt more marginalised and distressed because of two interrelated sets of barriers. The first were general barriers, hurdles to mental healthcare not exclusive to sexual minorities. These included financial and logistical obstacles, the prominence of psychiatry and the biomedical model, and unsatisfactory provider encounters. The second were sexual minority barriers, obstacles explicitly rooted in heterosexism and homophobia sometimes intersecting with other forms of marginality. These included experiencing discrimination and distrust, and limited sexual minority affirming options. Discussions of general barriers outweighed those of sexual minority barriers, demonstrating the health consequences of structural harms in the absence of overt structural stigma. Healthcare inaccessibility, income insecurity and the high cost of living are fostering poor mental health among sexual minority men. Research must consider the upstream policy changes necessary to counteract these harms.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (Fund # TE2-138299), the Canadian Foundation for AIDS Research and the Ontario HIV Treatment Network. Daniel Grace is supported by a Canada Research Chair in Sexual and Gender Minority Health.

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