ABSTRACT
Sexual and gender minorities (SGM) constitute vulnerable groups in many countries. Thus, they might be affected to a different extent than heterosexual and cisgender individuals by the Coronavirus pandemic. This systematic review aimed to summarize the state of international research on the mental and physical health-related as well as socioeconomic effects of the Coronavirus pandemic on SGM individuals. Following the PRISMA protocol, we identified 35 publications, including different article formats. We considered minority stress theory and intersectionality in synthesizing the reviewed literature. Our key finding implicates that both minority- and pandemic-specific adversities have increased the vulnerabilities of SGM individuals during the Coronavirus pandemic. Minority-specific stressors include discrimination experiences, poorer mental and physical health, and fewer socioeconomic resources. Pandemic-specific challenges such as the deferral and delay of medication or school closing have exposed certain SGM subgroups (transgender individuals, young SGM) to particularly high risk. Moreover, the reviewed evidence suggests distinctive interactive effects of minority-specific stressors with pandemic-specific challenges (e.g., being forced to stay close to rejecting others during lockdown periods). A significant share of the included literature was US-based, while research from other countries remained scarce. The specific mechanisms still deserve to be better understood to protect SGM in future crises, especially during pandemics.
List of abbreviations
AIDS = Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
LGBTQ* = individuals who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual, or queer and feel affiliated
MH = mental health
MSM = men who have sex with men
PH = physical health
HIV = Human Immunodeficiency Virus
SEC = socio-economic circumstances
SGM = sexual and gender minorities
SMW = sexual minority women (lesbian, bisexual, queer women)
TGNB = transgender and/or nonbinary
US = United States
Acknowledgments
Studies initially included as preprints and published during revision were updated in the reference list.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Supplementary material
Supplemental data for this article can be accessed online at https://doi.org/10.1080/00918369.2022.2074335