Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-21T23:47:52.910Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Mental health and help-seeking in Czech sexual minorities: a nationally representative cross-sectional study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2024

Michal Pitoňák
Affiliation:
Department of Public Mental Health, National Institute of Mental Health, Klecany, Czechia
Libor Potočár
Affiliation:
Department of Public Mental Health, National Institute of Mental Health, Klecany, Czechia PROMENTA Research Center, Department of Psychology, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
Tomáš Formánek*
Affiliation:
Department of Public Mental Health, National Institute of Mental Health, Klecany, Czechia Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
*
Corresponding author: Tomáš Formánek; Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Aims

The mental health of sexual minority (SM) individuals remains overlooked and understudied in Czechia. We aimed to estimate (1) the prevalence rate and (2) the relative risk of common mental disorders and (3) the mental distress severity among the Czech SM people compared with the heterosexual population. In addition, we aimed to investigate help-seeking for mental disorders in SM people.

Methods

We used data from a cross-sectional, nationally representative survey of Czech community-dwelling adults, consisting of 3063 respondents (response rate = 58.62%). We used the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview to assess the presence of mental disorders. In individuals scoring positively, we established help-seeking in the past 12 months. We assessed symptom severity using the 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire and the 7-item Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale. We computed the prevalence of mental disorders and the treatment gap with 95% confidence intervals. To assess the risk of having a mental disorder, we used binary logistic regression.

Results

We demonstrated that the prevalence of current mental disorders was 18.85% (17.43–20.28), 52.27% (36.91–67.63), 33.33% (19.5–47.17) and 25.93% (13.85–38) in heterosexual, gay or lesbian, bisexual and more sexually diverse individuals, respectively. Suicidal thoughts and behaviours were present in 5.73% (4.88–6.57), 25.00% (11.68–38.32), 22.92% (10.58–35.25) and 11.11% (2.45–19.77) of heterosexual, gay or lesbian, bisexual and more sexually diverse individuals, respectively. After confounder adjustment, gay or lesbian individuals were more likely to have at least one current mental disorder compared with heterosexual counterparts (odds ratio = 3.51; 1.83–6.76). For bisexual and sexually more diverse individuals, the results were consistent with a null effect (1.85; 0.96–3.45 and 0.89; 0.42–1.73). The mean depression symptom severity was 2.96 (2.81–3.11) in heterosexual people and 4.68 (2.95–6.42), 7.12 (5.07–9.18) and 5.17 (3.38–6.95) in gay or lesbian, bisexual and more sexually diverse individuals, respectively. The mean anxiety symptom severity was 1.97 (1.85–2.08) in heterosexual people and 3.5 (1.98–5.02), 4.63 (3.05–6.2) and 3.7 (2.29–5.11) in gay or lesbian, bisexual and more sexually diverse individuals, respectively. We demonstrated broadly consistent levels of treatment gap in heterosexual and SM individuals scoring positively for at least one current mental disorder (82.91%; 79.5–85.96 vs. 81.13%; 68.03–90.56).

Conclusions

We provide evidence that SM people in Czechia have substantially worse mental health outcomes than their heterosexual counterparts. Systemic changes are imperative to provide not only better and more sensitive care to SM individuals but also to address structural stigma contributing to these health disparities.

Type
Original Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press.

Introduction

Contemporary research consistently reveals that sexual minority (SM) individuals are more likely to experience worsened mental health outcomes compared with their heterosexual counterparts, with the most documented disparities encompassing a higher occurrence of depression and anxiety disorders (Pachankis et al., Reference Pachankis, Hatzenbuehler, Branstrom, Schmidt, Berg, Jonas, Pitonak, Baros and Weatherburn2021; Ploderl and Tremblay, Reference Ploderl and Tremblay2015), markedly elevated rates of suicidal thoughts and behaviours (Yildiz, Reference Yildiz2018) and increased risk of substance use (Marshal et al., Reference Marshal, Friedman, Stall, King, Miles, Gold, Bukstein and Morse2008; Schuler and Collins, Reference Schuler and Collins2020). Over time, it is also becoming evident that there are disparities among SM individuals, with certain groups, such as bisexual individuals, displaying more pronounced mental health challenges (Pakula et al., Reference Pakula, Shoveller, Ratner and Carpiano2016; Ross et al., Reference Ross, Salway, Tarasoff, MacKay, Hawkins and Fehr2018) and higher substance use rates (Schuler and Collins, Reference Schuler and Collins2020) than both their heterosexual and gay and lesbian counterparts.

Previous research building on frameworks such as the minority stress theory (Brooks, Reference Brooks1981; Meyer, Reference Meyer2003) or related models, such as the rejection sensitivity model (Feinstein, Reference Feinstein2020), the health equity promotion model (Fredriksen-Goldsen et al., Reference Fredriksen-Goldsen, Simoni, Kim, Lehavot, Walters, Yang, Hoy-Ellis and Muraco2014) or the psychological mediation framework (Hatzenbuehler, Reference Hatzenbuehler2009), has substantiated that these mental health disparities are largely due to societal stigma, discrimination and lack of acceptance experienced by SM individuals (Dürrbaum and Sattler, Reference Dürrbaum and Sattler2020; Pachankis and Bränström, Reference Pachankis and Bränström2018; Zeeman et al., Reference Zeeman, Sherriff, Browne, McGlynn, Mirandola, Gios, Davis, Sanchez-Lambert, Aujean, Pinto, Farinella, Donisi, Niedzwiedzka-Stadnik, Rosinska, Pierson, Amaddeo and Health2019), clearly denouncing the historically dominant pathologizing perspectives (Drescher, Reference Drescher2015).

Nonetheless, the research focusing on the mental health of SM individuals is not evenly distributed, with a systematic review that encompassed 199 studies revealing that 76% of these investigations were carried out in the US or Canada (Ploderl and Tremblay, Reference Ploderl and Tremblay2015). This research remains comparatively scarce in the region of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE), including Czechia, although notable studies exist (Chumakov et al., Reference Chumakov, Ashenbrenner, Petrova, Ventriglio, Azarova and Limankin2023; Cisek and Rogowska, Reference Cisek and Rogowska2023; Iniewicz et al., Reference Iniewicz, Sałapa, Wrona and Marek2017; Kardasz et al., Reference Kardasz, Gerymski and Parker2023; Kranz et al., Reference Kranz, Arontschik and Osin2023; Pitoňák et al., Reference Pitoňák, Kožený and Čihák2023a; Šević et al., Reference Šević, Ivanković and Štulhofer2016; Stojanovski et al., Reference Stojanovski, King, Bondikjova and Mihajlov2022). This is particularly noteworthy when we consider that the absence of sexual orientation questions in public health surveys constitutes a fundamental barrier limiting the generation of primary data on the mental health of SM populations (Bränström et al., Reference Bränström, van der Star A and Pachankis2019), thus allowing policymakers in the CEE region to overlook these people and their needs.

This oversight can be, then, viewed in light of structural stigma that encompasses laws and policies that deny or fail to protect equal rights for SM people, alongside prejudicial population attitudes (Hatzenbuehler, Reference Hatzenbuehler2016). Even though previous research has demonstrated a link between structural stigma and the mental health of SM people, including in CEE countries (Bränström et al., Reference Bränström, Fellman and Pachankis2022; Pachankis et al., Reference Pachankis, Hatzenbuehler, Branstrom, Schmidt, Berg, Jonas, Pitonak, Baros and Weatherburn2021), there is a strong reluctance among policymakers to implement legal changes that would have a positive impact on SMs. This includes the passing of marriage equality legislation and the recognition of same-sex families through the allowance of joint adoptions by same-sex couples (Pitoňák, Reference Pitoňák, Boyer, Eaves and Fluri2023). Indeed, in Czechia, no substantial legal change has occurred since the introduction of registered partnership in 2006, 18 years ago.

The first Czech study on SM mental health demonstrated that all SM subgroups had significantly higher levels of psychological distress relative to the general population, with the rates being higher in bisexual than in gay and lesbian respondents (Pitoňák et al., Reference Pitoňák, Kožený and Čihák2023a). However, there were some important limitations in that study, including the use of non-probability sampling and a non-specific mental distress self-report scale to assess mental health outcomes (Pitoňák et al., Reference Pitoňák, Kožený and Čihák2023a). Moreover, while existing research has demonstrated that SM people may face additional barriers when seeking help for their mental health (McDermott et al., Reference McDermott, Hughes and Rawlings2018; Spengler et al., Reference Spengler, Tierney, Elledge and Grzanka2023), no evidence on help-seeking behaviour in Czech SMs is available.

We are convinced that providing robust evidence on mental health and associated needs may be one of the key steps needed to overcome the profound oversight that SM people experience in Czechia. In the present study, we aimed to use data from the first Czech nationally representative probability survey that included sexual identity and mental health measures to provide robust evidence on mental health and associated needs of Czech SM individuals. Specifically, we aimed to estimate (1) the prevalence rate and (2) the relative risk of common mental disorders and (3) the mental distress severity among the SM individuals compared with the heterosexual population. In addition, we aimed to investigate the help-seeking behaviours of SM people in Czechia. We hypothesized that SM individuals would show an increased risk of anxiety disorders, depression, suicidal thoughts and behaviours, and an increased mental distress severity compared with the heterosexual population. We hypothesized that the most affected SM group would be bisexual individuals, followed by lesbian or gay individuals (i.e., bisexual > lesbian or gay > heterosexual).

Methods

The research questions and the analytical plan were pre-registered at Open Science Framework before data analyses started (Pitoňák et al., Reference Pitoňák, Potočár and Formánek2023b). Any deviations from the analytical plan are described in Supplementary Methods.

Data

We analysed data from a cross-sectional survey of Czech community-dwelling adults that was conducted by a professional data collection agency in November and December 2022. Three different data collection methodologies were employed: (1) household probability sampling and computer-assisted personal interviewing, (2) panel sampling and computer-assisted telephone interviewing and (3) panel sampling and computer-assisted online interviewing. For personal interviewing, a two-stage sampling method was employed. The procedure involved randomly selecting a sample of voting districts and a random starting address in each of these. In multi-apartment dwellings, the interviewers were asked to choose the fourth apartment when counting from the top. Then, in single‐member households, individuals aged 18 or more years were eligible for interviewing, whereas in multi-member households, the person with their birthday closest to the date of the interviewer’s visit was asked to participate. In the online and telephone interviewing modes, the procedure consisted of randomly emailing or telephoning individuals present in a panel of a professional data collection agency. In the initial step, strata by age, sex, level of education and region of residence were created, and the required number of respondents for each stratum was established. Then, unique identifiers corresponding to this were drawn from the panel, and the chosen individuals were contacted to participate in the study. If the chosen person declined to participate following repeated reminders, then another person with the same target sociodemographic characteristic was contacted. The procedure was repeated until the required number of respondents for each stratum was reached. The dataset consists of 3063 (response rate [RR] = 58.62%), 3248 (RR = 29.75%) and 1000 (RR = 8.97%) respondents who completed the personal, online and telephone versions of the survey, respectively. The samples were representative of the Czech adult population in terms of age, sex, education and region of residence. Additional technical parameters of the data are provided elsewhere (Potočár et al., Reference Potočár, Mladá, Kučera, Mohr, Winkler and Formánek2024).

To increase the confidence in the validity of our results, we restricted the main analyses to data from household probability sampling and personal interviewing, which represents a golden standard of mental health assessment. We used data from panel samples interviewed online and by telephone in sensitivity analyses. All respondents provided informed consent. The study was approved by the Ethics Committee of the National Institute of Mental Health (registration number: 173/21).

Measures

To assess sexual orientation, we employed a self-identification approach. Respondents were asked the question ‘Which option best describes your sexual orientation?’, with the response options being ‘heterosexual’, ‘gay’, ‘lesbian’, ‘bisexual’ and ‘other’ (Sell, Reference Sell, Meyer and Northridge2007). To prevent unnecessary ‘othering’, we coded respondents who selected ‘other’ as being ‘more sexually diverse’. To assess sex, the respondents were asked to report ‘Sex (assigned at birth)’, with response options being ‘male’ and ‘female’, and in terms of gender identity, the respondents were asked ‘How would you describe yourself?’ and could choose from ‘man’, ‘woman’, ‘transgender’, ‘I do not identify neither as man, woman nor transgender’ (Badgett et al., Reference Badgett, Baker, Conron, Gates, Gill, Greytak and Herman2014). To facilitate the disclosure of authentic identities, respondents in the personal and telephone interviewing modes were not required to say out loud the entire response option (e.g., ‘bisexual’), instead, the provision of the letter denoting the response option was sufficient (e.g., ‘d’).

Then, to assess the occurrence of mental disorders, we used the 5th version of the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview (M.I.N.I.), a structured psycho-diagnostic interview (Sheehan et al., Reference Sheehan, Lecrubier, Sheehan, Amorim, Janavs, Weiller, Hergueta, Baker and Dunbar1998). The diagnostic criteria in M.I.N.I. correspond to the 4th edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders and the 10th version of the International Classification of Diseases (Sheehan et al., Reference Sheehan, Lecrubier, Sheehan, Amorim, Janavs, Weiller, Hergueta, Baker and Dunbar1998). The survey collected data on a subset of M.I.N.I. modules, including (1) a major depressive episode (MDE), (2) anxiety disorders (panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, agoraphobia, social phobia and posttraumatic stress disorder), (3) alcohol use disorders (AUDs; alcohol dependence and alcohol abuse) and (4) suicidal thoughts and behaviours.

In individuals who scored positively for mental disorders on M.I.N.I., we established whether they had sought medical or other professional help due to their mental health in the past 12 months. The list of medical or other professionals consisted of (1) psychiatrists, (2) psychologists, (3) general practitioners, (4) crisis interventions and (5) online therapists or online therapeutic platforms. We considered not seeking help from any of the above professionals as being indicative of a treatment gap for mental disorders.

We assessed the depression- and anxiety-related symptom severity using the 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) (Kroenke et al., Reference Kroenke, Spitzer and Williams2001) and the 7-item Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale (GAD-7) (Spitzer et al., Reference Spitzer, Kroenke, Williams and Löwe2006). We computed composite scores by summing up all individual items. The values on PHQ-9 can, then, range from 0 to 27, whereas on GAD-7 from 0 to 21: higher values indicate higher symptom severity on both instruments. On both instruments, scores ≥5 and ≥10 indicate mild and moderate symptomatology, respectively (Kroenke et al., Reference Kroenke, Spitzer and Williams2001; Spitzer et al., Reference Spitzer, Kroenke, Williams and Löwe2006).

Finally, we considered several sociodemographic variables as confounders, including age, gender, work status, level of education, income level, relationship status (married or lives with a partner/spouse, married but separated or in a relationship but living apart, widowed, divorced and single) and size of the region of residence. We merged respondents who were married with those who were otherwise partnered/spoused into one category to account for uneven institutional conditions that prevent SM people from becoming married in Czechia.

Statistical analyses

We computed the prevalence rate of (1) any mental disorder, (2) MDE, (3) anxiety disorders, (4) AUDs and (5) suicidal thoughts and behaviours with 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs), stratified by respondents’ sexual orientation identity (i.e., heterosexual, gay or lesbian, bisexual and more sexually diverse).

To assess the risk of having a mental disorder, we used binary logistic regression with sexual orientation identity as exposure while controlling for a set of potential confounders associated with mental health (i.e., age, gender, education, work status, income level, relationship status and size of the region of residence). The reference group was heterosexual individuals. To assess the differences between SM subgroups, we compared bisexual and more sexually diverse individuals with gay or lesbian individuals (reference group) while adjusting for the same set of confounders as specified above.

Then, to analyse depression- and anxiety-related symptom severity, we used linear regression models with PHQ-9 and GAD-7 composite scores as outcomes, sexual orientation identity as exposure and heterosexual individuals as reference group while adjusting for the same set of confounders as specified above. To assess the differences between SM subgroups, we compared bisexual and more sexually diverse individuals with gay or lesbian individuals (reference group) while adjusting for above confounders. We log-transformed the PHQ-9 and GAD-7 scores before their inclusion into the models and estimated robust (sandwich) standard errors.

For those who scored positively for (1) any mental disorder, (2) MDE, (3) anxiety disorders, (4) AUDs and (5) suicidal thoughts and behaviours, we estimated the treatment gap stratified by SM status (gay or lesbian or bisexual or more sexually diverse vs. heterosexual individuals).

For the prevalence of mental disorders and treatment gap prevalence, we computed 95% CIs using the delta method. If a subgroup had ≤5 individuals, we calculated the exact binomial (Clopper–Pearson) 95% CIs. We conducted all data preprocessing steps and statistical analyses in R statistical programming language (version 4.2.2) (R Core Team, 2024).

Sensitivity analyses

We assessed the prevalence rates and relative risk of mental disorders, the mental distress severity, treatment gap and help-seeking behaviour using data from panel samples, interviewed online and by telephone. The analytical approach was analogous to the one used in the main analysis. Additionally, in regression models, we included the mode of interviewing (telephone vs. online) in the set of confounders. Based on the substantial differences between results obtained by different data collection methodologies that we demonstrated previously (Potočár et al., Reference Potočár, Mladá, Kučera, Mohr, Winkler and Formánek2024), we applied a cautious approach to panel data and used them only to assess whether mental health outcomes in SM people were broadly consistent with the results from the main analysis.

Results

Sample

The sample consisted of 2917 (95.2%) heterosexual, 44 (1.44%) gay or lesbian, 48 (1.57%) bisexual and 54 (1.76%) more sexually diverse individuals. Gay or lesbian (mean = 34.64; standard deviation = 12.10) and bisexual individuals (34.81; 15.56) tended to be younger than heterosexual individuals (49.86; 16.76). Compared with heterosexual people, a higher proportion of gay and lesbian individuals had a university-level education (29.55% vs. 18.17%), was employed (65.91% vs. 50.74%), had the highest income level (18.18% vs. 4.05%) and lived in large cities with more than 100,000 inhabitants (40.91% vs. 21.43%). For more detailed descriptive statistics, see Table 1.

Table 1. Descriptive statistics of the sample

The results are expressed as either absolute numbers (n) with percent proportions (%) or averages with standard deviations (SD).

Prevalence and relative risk of common mental disorders

We demonstrated that 18.85% (95% CI = 17.43–20.28) of heterosexual individuals met the criteria for any current mental disorder. In stark contrast, the prevalence rate for any current mental disorder was 52.27% (36.91–67.63) in gay or lesbian, 33.33% (19.5–47.17) in bisexual and 25.93% (13.85–38.00) in more sexually diverse individuals. The proportion of individuals scoring positively for current MDE was 4.73% (3.96–5.50) in heterosexual, 11.36% (3.79–24.56) in gay or lesbian, 16.67% (5.73–27.60) in bisexual and 7.41% (2.06–17.89) in more sexually diverse individuals. AUDs were present in 9.29% (8.24–10.34) of heterosexual, 25.00% (11.68–38.32) of gay or lesbian, 16.67% (5.73–27.60) of bisexual and 14.81% (5.03–24.60) of more sexually diverse individuals. The proportion of individuals that had an anxiety disorder was 7.37% (6.42–8.32) in heterosexual, 15.91% (4.66–27.16) in gay or lesbian, 20.83% (8.92–32.75) in bisexual and 11.11% (2.45–19.77) in more sexually diverse individuals. Considering suicidal thoughts and behaviours, 5.73% (4.88–6.57) of heterosexual, 25.00% (11.68–38.32) of gay or lesbian, 22.92% (10.58–35.25) of bisexual and 11.11% (2.45–19.77) of more sexually diverse individuals met the diagnostic criteria. The detailed results are provided in Fig. 1 and Supplementary Table S2.

The results are expressed as prevalence rates with 95% confidence intervals.

Figure 1. Prevalence of mental disorders per M.I.N.I.

After controlling for sociodemographic confounders, gay or lesbian individuals (odds ratio = 3.51; 95% CI = 1.83–6.76) had an elevated risk for fulfilling the criteria for having any mental disorder compared with heterosexual counterparts. For bisexual individuals, the 95% CI covered a range from a decreased to an increased risk (1.85; 0.96–3.45). We demonstrated increased risk for having a MDE and anxiety disorders in bisexual individuals (3.55; 1.42–7.89 and 3.21; 1.44–6.62), whereas in gay or lesbian people, the 95% CI covered a range from a decreased to an increased risk (2.64; 0.83–6.92 and 2.18; 0.83–5.03). For AUDs, 95% covered a range from a decreased to an increased risk in both gay or lesbian (1.66; 0.73–3.52) and bisexual (1.63; 0.68–3.52) individuals. We demonstrated an increased risk for having suicidal thoughts and behaviours in both gay or lesbian (4.49; 1.99–9.53) and bisexual (4.76; 2.18–9.70) individuals. In more sexually diverse individuals, the 95% CI covered a range from decreased to an increased risk for having any mental disorder (0.89; 0.42–1.73), AUDs (0.80; 0.29–1.91), MDE (1.29; 0.37–3.43), anxiety disorders (1.07; 0.38–2.51) and suicidal thoughts and behaviours (1.01; 0.31–2.59). The detailed results are provided in Fig. 2 and Supplementary Table S3.

The results are expressed as adjusted odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals. The models were adjusted for age, gender, education, work status, income level, relationship status and size of the region of residence. Heterosexual individuals were used as reference category.

Figure 2. Relative risk of mental disorder occurrence per M.I.N.I.

In subgroup analyses with gay or lesbian individuals as reference group, more sexually diverse individuals had a decreased risk for having any mental disorder (0.25; 0.10–0.63) and suicidal thoughts and behaviours (0.23; 0.06–0.74). For other outcomes in more sexually diverse individuals as well as for each outcome in bisexual individuals, the results were consistent with a null effect. For detailed results, see Supplementary Table S3.

Mental distress severity

Heterosexual individuals had a mean depression symptom severity of 2.96 (95% CI = 2.81–3.11), whereas, in gay or lesbian, bisexual, and more sexually diverse individuals, it was 4.68 (2.95–6.42), 7.12 (5.07–9.18) and 5.17 (3.38–6.95), respectively. Considering anxiety, heterosexual people had a mean symptom severity of 1.97 (1.85–2.08), whereas, in gay or lesbian, bisexual, and more sexually diverse individuals, we detected 3.50 (1.98–5.02), 4.63 (3.05–6.20) and 3.70 (2.29–5.11), respectively. For detailed results, see Fig. 3 and Supplementary Table S4.

The results are expressed as averages with 95% confidence intervals.

Figure 3. Mean PHQ-9 and GAD-7 scores

After adjusting for sociodemographic confounders, gay or lesbian (beta coefficient = 1.48; 95% CI = 1.06–2.05), bisexual (2.09; 1.57–2.78) and more sexually diverse (1.42; 1.08–1.85) individuals had a higher severity of depressive symptoms than their heterosexual counterparts. Similarly, we demonstrated higher anxiety symptoms severity in gay or lesbian (1.40; 1.02–1.93), bisexual (1.66; 1.23–2.23) and more sexually diverse individuals (1.44; 1.14–1.83). For detailed results, see Fig. 4 and Supplementary Table S5.

In the comparison of SM subgroups, with gay or lesbian individuals being the reference category, all results were consistent with a null effect. For detailed results, see Supplementary Table S5.

The results are expressed as adjusted beta coefficients with 95% confidence intervals. The models were adjusted for age, gender, education, work status, income level, relationship status and size of the region of residence. Heterosexual individuals were used as reference category.

Figure 4. Linear regression models of mental distress severity per PHQ-9 and GAD-7

Treatment gap

We demonstrated broadly consistent levels of treatment gap in heterosexual and SM individuals fulfilling the criteria for any mental disorder (82.91%; 95% CI = 79.50–85.96 vs. 81.13%; 68.03–90.56). In SM individuals scoring positively for MDE, we detected a wider treatment gap than in heterosexual people (82.35%; 56.57–96.20 vs. 60.87%; 52.20–69.06). For AUDs, anxiety disorders and suicidal thoughts and behaviours, SM and heterosexual people had broadly consistent levels of treatment gap. For all results, see Table 2.

Table 2. Treatment gap prevalence for mental disorders established per M.I.N.I

The results are expressed as treatment gap prevalence rates with 95% confidence intervals.

Sensitivity analyses

Using data from panel samples interviewed online and by telephone, the results were broadly consistent with the findings of the main analysis. Namely, SM individuals demonstrated generally higher rates of mental disorders and also higher symptom severity than their heterosexual counterparts. For detailed results, see Supplementary Table S1 and S6–S10.

Discussion

The main findings

In this first Czech nationally representative survey that included sexual identity and mental health measures, more than half of gay and lesbian respondents and a third of bisexual people met the criteria for at least one current mental disorder. We showed suicidal thoughts and behaviours in around 6% of heterosexual but in 25% of gay and lesbian and 23% of bisexual people. While bisexual people demonstrated higher rates of MDE and anxiety disorders than their gay or lesbian counterparts, when adjusting for sociodemographic characteristics, we did not detect differences between these two SM groups. The treatment gap in SM people having at least one mental disorder was very wide, reaching more than 80%, but in line with estimates for heterosexual people.

These findings underline the need for continued mental health monitoring of SM groups in Czechia, including in future public health surveys. Then, the detected mental health needs should stimulate service providers to introduce services tailored to SM people (Horne et al., Reference Horne, Maroney, Nel, Chaparro and Manalastas2019). Finally, these findings should contribute to challenging the structural determinants that are most likely responsible for these outcomes, including the legal regulations and vocabulary used in public discourse.

Mental health outcomes

Consistent with findings from abroad (Ploderl and Tremblay, Reference Ploderl and Tremblay2015), we demonstrated substantially elevated rates of MDE and anxiety disorders in SM people. In gay and lesbian people, this is despite them being, on average, more educated and with higher income levels than their heterosexual counterparts: factors generally associated with better mental health outcomes. Indeed, existing research suggested that other structural factors such as stigma and minority stress might be responsible for worsened mental health outcomes in SM populations (Hatzenbuehler et al., Reference Hatzenbuehler, Phelan and Link2013; Pitoňák, Reference Pitoňák2017).

While approximately 6% of heterosexual people demonstrated suicidal thoughts and behaviours, a full one-quarter of gay and lesbian and nearly a quarter of bisexual people scored positively for these. Factors such as victimization, bullying or other forms of minority stress (Barnett et al., Reference Barnett, Molock, Nieves-Lugo and Zea2019) may potentially thwart the sense of social belongingness among SM people and subsequently contribute to an elevated risk of suicidal ideation (Chu et al., Reference Chu, Buchman-Schmitt, Stanley, Hom, Tucker, Hagan, Rogers, Podlogar, Chiurliza, Ringer, Michaels, Patros and Joiner2017; Joiner, Reference Joiner2005; Rogers et al., Reference Rogers, Hom, Janakiraman and Joiner2021).

We showed that a full quarter of gay and lesbian respondents have met the criteria for AUDs, with the rates being considerably higher than in heterosexual people. However, a systematic review by Ploderl and Tremblay (Reference Ploderl and Tremblay2015) showed mixed evidence, with negative or near zero effect for SM men based on all studies but higher rates in most of higher quality studies using clinical diagnoses. The higher rates of AUDs among Czech SM people may be, in part, the consequence of the high normalization of alcohol drinking in Czech culture (Mravčík et al., Reference Mravčík, Chomynová, Nechanská, Černíková and Csémy2019), with alcohol consumption representing a highly prevalent dysfunctional coping strategy.

While most studies conducted abroad showed that bisexual individuals may have worse mental health compared with other SMs (Ross et al., Reference Ross, Salway, Tarasoff, MacKay, Hawkins and Fehr2018), our evidence is mixed. Although we may only hypothesize, there are indications that the Czech gay and lesbian population may be affected by salient structural and interpersonal minority stressors compared with other SM groups. A pioneering Czech study on mental health in SM people showed that 45%, 40% and 39% of lesbian, gay and bisexual respondents felt discriminated against during the past 5 years, respectively (Pitoňák and Macháčková, Reference Pitoňák and Macháčková2023). The same study also demonstrated that gay individuals were most affected by physical assaults.

Treatment gap

In four cross-sectional surveys conducted between 2017 and 2022, a consistently very wide treatment gap in the Czech general population was demonstrated, ranging from approximately 60% in people with MDE to around 90% in people with AUDs (Potočár et al., Reference Potočár, Mladá, Kučera, Mohr, Winkler and Formánek2024). The broadly consistent treatment gap in SM individuals and heterosexual people in the present study suggests that the treatment gap is uniformly wide in Czechia. Nevertheless, SM individuals may still face more of the same barriers as the heterosexual population and plausibly also specific ones.

For example, existing research suggests that minority stress undermines mental health in SM people by reducing access to health services ergo reducing the very benefits of care (Hatzenbuehler et al., Reference Hatzenbuehler, Phelan and Link2013). This may include barriers such as fear of disclosure due to expected discrimination from healthcare providers (McDermott et al., Reference McDermott, Hughes and Rawlings2018). In this context, it is important to note that currently there is no special lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender+ (LGBT+) themed training required for mental healthcare providers available in Czechia, and the awareness of the minority stress framework is also relatively limited in the region (Pitoňák, Reference Pitoňák2017). In addition, specific healthcare services such as specialized support groups and ‘LGBT+ friendly’ therapeutic care providers (Steinke et al., Reference Steinke, Root-Bowman, Estabrook, Levine and Kantor2017) are currently underdeveloped in Czechia, and, if available, these are reliant on private and non-governmental resources.

Systemic determinants of SM mental health and healthcare use in Czechia

Responsible institutions have, so far, failed to recognize the specific risk factors such as minority stress and stigma related to SM status (Hatzenbuehler et al., Reference Hatzenbuehler, Phelan and Link2013; Pitoňák, Reference Pitoňák2017). For example, the national suicide prevention plan by the Czech Ministry of Health does not include a single mention of SM, sexual and gender minority (SGM), or LGBT+-related terms. Available research demonstrates that either education strategies that aim to include LGBT+ topics and prevention of stressors such as antiqueer bullying (Hatzenbuehler, Reference Hatzenbuehler2011) or legal changes such as an introduction of marriage equality (Raifman et al., Reference Raifman, Moscoe, Austin and McConnell2017) have measurable effects on reducing suicidality and minority stress among SM groups. Despite this, neither LGBT+ inclusive curriculum nor prevention of antiqueer bullying is a mandatory part of Czech education. Marriage equality law was first proposed in 2018, and it, unfortunately, became a gist of political anti-gender/anti-LGBT+ mobilization that hit not only Czechia. Anti-gender/anti-LGBT+ backlashes, including increases in physical violence, in neighbouring Poland, Slovakia and Hungary, seem to follow similar depreciation of SGM people from the site of politicians (Pitoňák, Reference Pitoňák, Boyer, Eaves and Fluri2023). For instance, in 2022, 71% of Czech SGM respondents considered offensive statements by politicians to be ‘widespread’, contrasting with 43% in 2018 and 27% in 2012 (Pitoňák and Macháčková, Reference Pitoňák and Macháčková2023).

Methodological considerations

Main strengths include using a considerably large, nationally representative sample and employment of a structured psycho-diagnostic instrument.

This study has some limitations. First, the number of SM individuals in our sample was considerably small, resulting in substantial uncertainty in some estimates. Second, the use of personal interviewing in household samples most likely contributed to the underestimation of the true number of SM individuals due to stigma-related concealment of their identities (Villarroel et al., Reference Villarroel, Turner, Eggleston, Al-Tayyib, Rogers, Roman, Cooley and Gordek2006). This is partially supported by a larger proportion of SM people present in our panel samples. However, there can be complex differences between samples obtained by different data collection methodologies (Potočár et al., Reference Potočár, Mladá, Kučera, Mohr, Winkler and Formánek2024): disentangling these should motivate future research. Third, we coded the individuals who chose the ‘other’ option on our sexual orientation measure as ‘more sexually diverse’; however, we do not know the precise composition of this group. Future research including more specific items in surveys is warranted. Fourth, due to the small sample size, we were not able to investigate the outcomes of transgender and non-binary individuals; thus, the mental health of gender minorities in Czechia remains largely unexplored. Last, due to financial constraints, we were not able to collect data on multiple important mental health outcomes, including psychotic and personality disorders. Furthermore, for the same reasons, we were unable to assess symptoms severity in conditions other than depression and anxiety.

Conclusions

In this study, we reported results from the first Czech nationally representative survey to include sexual identity and mental health measures. We provide evidence that SM people are substantially more likely to have mental disorders than their heterosexual counterparts, with the disparities in rates for suicidal thoughts and behaviours being particularly striking. These inequalities in mental health remain largely unaddressed by responsible national institutions. Hence, it is time for systemic changes that would support the affirmative and non-pathologizing perspectives to provide not only better and more sensitive care to SM individuals but also to help expose and pull down the very fabric of structural stigma which is known as the driver of these health disparities.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S2045796024000210.

Availability of data and materials

The respondents did not consent to have their data publicly available, but we will provide access to data upon a reasonable request (particularly replication). The complete analytical code is available at a dedicated GitHub repository: https://github.com/libpot/Mental_Health_Sex_Min_Czechia.

Author contributions

MP contributed to designing the study, performed the literature review, contributed to interpretation of results and led the writing of the manuscript. LP contributed to designing the study, performed the statistical analysis, contributed to interpretation of results and provided critical revisions to the manuscript. TF initiated and designed the study, contributed to statistical analysis and interpretation of results, performed the code review and wrote a substantial part of the manuscript.

Financial support

This study was supported by the Czech Health Research Council (grant number: NU22-D-134) and by the Ministry of Health, Czech Republic (funding number: 00023752). The funding organization had no role in the design and conduct of the study; collection, management, analysis and interpretation of data; review or approval of the manuscript; or the decision to submit the manuscript for publication.

Competing interests

The authors have nothing to disclose.

References

Badgett, ML, Baker, K, Conron, K, Gates, G, Gill, A, Greytak, E and Herman, J (2014) Best practices for asking questions to identify transgender and other gender minority respondents on population-based surveys (GenIUSS). The GenIUSS Group, UCLA Williams Institute.Google Scholar
Barnett, AP, Molock, SD, Nieves-Lugo, K and Zea, MC (2019) Anti-LGBT victimization, fear of violence at school, and suicide risk among adolescents. Psychology of Sexual Orientation and Gender Diversity 6(1), 8895.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bränström, R, Fellman, D and Pachankis, J (2022) Structural stigma and sexual minority victimization across 28 countries: The moderating role of gender, gender nonconformity, and socioeconomic status. Journal of Interpersonal Violence 38(3–4), 35633585.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bränström, R, van der Star A, and Pachankis, J (2019) European-wide monitoring of sexual and gender minority health: A necessary and feasible task for advancing health equity. The European Journal of Public Health 29, 199200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brooks, VR (1981) Minority Stress and Lesbian Women. Lexington, MA: Lexington Books.Google Scholar
Chu, C, Buchman-Schmitt, JM, Stanley, IH, Hom, MA, Tucker, RP, Hagan, CR, Rogers, ML, Podlogar, MC, Chiurliza, B, Ringer, FB, Michaels, MS, Patros, CHG and Joiner, TE (2017) The interpersonal theory of suicide: A systematic review and meta-analysis of a decade of cross-national research. Psychological Bulletin 143(12), 13131345.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chumakov, EM, Ashenbrenner, YV, Petrova, NN, Ventriglio, A, Azarova, LA and Limankin, OV (2023) Mental health, minority stress and discrimination against transgender people: A cross-sectional survey in Russia. International Review of Psychiatry 35(3-4), 331338.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cisek, A and Rogowska, AM (2023) The relationship between minority stress and depressive symptoms in the LGBTQA population from Poland. European Journal of Investigation in Health, Psychology and Education 13, 10001014.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Drescher, J (2015) Queer diagnoses revisited: The past and future of homosexuality and gender diagnoses in DSM and ICD. International Review of Psychiatry 27(5), 386395.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dürrbaum, T and Sattler, FA (2020) Minority stress and mental health in lesbian, gay male, and bisexual youths: A meta-analysis. Journal of LGBT Youth 17, 298314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Feinstein, BA (2020) The rejection sensitivity model as a framework for understanding sexual minority mental health. Archives of Sexual Behavior 49(7), 22472258.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fredriksen-Goldsen, KI, Simoni, JM, Kim, H-J, Lehavot, K, Walters, KL, Yang, J, Hoy-Ellis, CP and Muraco, A (2014) The health equity promotion model: Reconceptualization of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) health disparities. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 84(6), 653663.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hatzenbuehler, ML (2009) How does sexual minority stigma “get under the skin”? A psychological mediation framework. Psychological Bulletin 135(5), 707730.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hatzenbuehler, ML (2011) The social environment and suicide attempts in lesbian, gay, and bisexual youth. Pediatrics 127(5), 896903.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hatzenbuehler, ML (2016) Structural stigma: Research evidence and implications for psychological science. American Psychologist 71(8), 742751.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hatzenbuehler, ML, Phelan, JC and Link, BG (2013) Stigma as a fundamental cause of population health inequalities. American Journal of Public Health 103(5), 813821.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Horne, SG, Maroney, MR, Nel, JA, Chaparro, RA and Manalastas, EJ (2019) Emergence of a transnational LGBTI psychology: Commonalities and challenges in advocacy and activism. American Psychologist 74(8), 967986.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Iniewicz, G, Sałapa, K, Wrona, M and Marek, N (2017) Minority stress among homosexual and bisexual individuals—From theoretical concepts to research tools: The Sexual Minority Stress Scale. Archives of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy 19(3), 6980.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Joiner, T (2005) Why People Die by Suicide. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Kardasz, Z, Gerymski, R and Parker, A (2023) Anxiety, attachment styles and life satisfaction in the polish LGBTQ+ community. International Journal of Environmental Research & Public Health 20, .CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kranz, D, Arontschik, N and Osin, EN (2023) Minority stress among Russian lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people in young and middle adulthood: Associations with internalizing and externalizing mental health problems. Psychology of Sexual Orientation and Gender Diversity. Advance online publication.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kroenke, K, Spitzer, RL and Williams, JBW (2001) The PHQ‐9: Validity of a brief depression severity measure. Journal of General Internal Medicine 16(9), 606613.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Marshal, MP, Friedman, MS, Stall, R, King, KM, Miles, J, Gold, MA, Bukstein, OG and Morse, JQ (2008) Sexual orientation and adolescent substance use: A meta-analysis and methodological review. Addiction 103(4), 546556.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McDermott, E, Hughes, E and Rawlings, V (2018) Norms and normalisation: Understanding lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer youth, suicidality and help-seeking. Culture, Health & Sexuality 20(2), 156172.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Meyer, IH (2003) Prejudice, social stress, and mental health in lesbian, gay, and bisexual populations: Conceptual issues and research evidence. Psychological Bulletin 129(5), 674697.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mravčík, V, Chomynová, P, Nechanská, B, Černíková, T and Csémy, L (2019) Alcohol use and its consequences in the Czech Republic. Central European Journal of Public Health 27, S15S28.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pachankis, JE and Bränström, R (2018) Hidden from happiness: Structural stigma, sexual orientation concealment, and life satisfaction across 28 countries. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 86, 403415.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pachankis, JE, Hatzenbuehler, ML, Branstrom, R, Schmidt, AJ, Berg, RC, Jonas, K, Pitonak, M, Baros, S and Weatherburn, P (2021) Structural stigma and sexual minority men’s depression and suicidality: A multilevel examination of mechanisms and mobility across 48 countries. Journal of Abnormal Psychology 130(7), 713726.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pakula, B, Shoveller, J, Ratner, PA and Carpiano, R (2016) Prevalence and co-occurrence of heavy drinking and anxiety and mood disorders among gay, lesbian, bisexual, and heterosexual Canadians. American Journal of Public Health 106, 10421048.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pitoňák, M (2017) Mental health in non-heterosexuals: Minority stress theory and related explanation frameworks review. Mental Health & Prevention 5, 6373.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pitoňák, M (2023) LGBT+ activism and morality politics in Central and Eastern Europe: Understanding the dynamic equilibrium in Czechia from a broader transnational perspective. In Boyer, K, Eaves, LE and Fluri, J (eds), Activist Feminist Geographies. Bristol: Bristol University Press, 94119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pitoňák, M, Kožený, J and Čihák, M (2023a) Disparities in psychological distress between Czech general population and LGB+ community sample. Journal of Bisexuality 23(2), 151169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pitoňák, M and Macháčková, M (2023) Being LGBTQ+ in Czechia 2022. Klecany: National Institute of Mental Health, .Google Scholar
Pitoňák, M, Potočár, L and Formánek, T (2023b) Mental health and associated treatment gap in sexual minorities in Czechia: A nationally representative cross-sectional survey. https://osf.io/5e68n/ (accessed 26 February 2024).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ploderl, M and Tremblay, P (2015) Mental health of sexual minorities. A systematic review. International Review of Psychiatry 27(5), 367385.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Potočár, L, Mladá, K, Kučera, M, Mohr, P, Winkler, P and Formánek, T (2024) Population mental health, help-seeking and associated barriers following the COVID-19 pandemic: Analysis of repeated nationally representative cross-sectional surveys in Czechia. Psychiatry Research 331, .CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Raifman, J, Moscoe, E, Austin, SB and McConnell, M (2017) Difference-in-differences analysis of the association between state same-sex marriage policies and adolescent suicide attempts. JAMA Pediatrics 171(4), 350356.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
R Core Team (2024) R: A language and environment for statistical computing. Vienna: R Foundation for Statistical Computing.Google Scholar
Rogers, ML, Hom, MA, Janakiraman, R and Joiner, TE (2021) Examination of minority stress pathways to suicidal ideation among sexual minority adults: The moderating role of LGBT community connectedness. Psychology of Sexual Orientation and Gender Diversity 8(1), 3847.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ross, LE, Salway, T, Tarasoff, LA, MacKay, JM, Hawkins, BW and Fehr, CP (2018) Prevalence of depression and anxiety among bisexual people compared to gay, lesbian, and heterosexual individuals: A systematic review and meta-analysis. The Journal of Sex Research 55(4-5), 435456.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schuler, MS and Collins, RL (2020) Sexual minority substance use disparities: Bisexual women at elevated risk relative to other sexual minority groups. Drug and Alcohol Dependence 206, .CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sell, RL (2007) Defining and measuring sexual orientation for research. In Meyer, IH and Northridge, ME (eds), The Health of Sexual Minorities. New York: Springer, 355374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Šević, S, Ivanković, I and Štulhofer, A (2016) Emotional intimacy among coupled heterosexual and gay/bisexual Croatian men: Assessing the role of minority stress. Archives of Sexual Behavior 45(5), 12591268.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sheehan, DV, Lecrubier, Y, Sheehan, KH, Amorim, P, Janavs, J, Weiller, E, Hergueta, T, Baker, R and Dunbar, GC (1998) The Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview (M.I.N.I): The development and validation of a structured diagnostic psychiatric interview for DSM-IV and ICD-10. The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 59(Suppl 20), 2233.Google ScholarPubMed
Spengler, ES, Tierney, D, Elledge, LC and Grzanka, PR (2023) Beyond the individual: Sexual minority help-seeking and the consequences of structural barriers. Journal of Counseling Psychology 70(2), 133145.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Spitzer, RL, Kroenke, K, Williams, JBW and Löwe, B (2006) A brief measure for assessing generalized anxiety disorder: The GAD-7. Archives of Internal Medicine 166(10), 10921097.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Steinke, J, Root-Bowman, M, Estabrook, S, Levine, DS and Kantor, LM (2017) Meeting the needs of sexual and gender minority youth: Formative research on potential digital health interventions. The Journal of Adolescent Health 60(5), 541548.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stojanovski, K, King, EJ, Bondikjova, V and Mihajlov, A (2022) Stigma shapes lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer person’s mental health and experiences with mental health services in North Macedonia. Global Public Health 17(6), 857869.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Villarroel, MA, Turner, CF, Eggleston, E, Al-Tayyib, A, Rogers, SM, Roman, AM, Cooley, PC and Gordek, H (2006) Same-gender sex in the United States: Impact of T-ACASI on prevalence estimates. Public Opinion Quarterly 70(2), 166196.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Yildiz, E (2018) Suicide in sexual minority populations: A systematic review of evidence-based studies. Archives of Psychiatric Nursing 32(4), 650659.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zeeman, L, Sherriff, N, Browne, K, McGlynn, N, Mirandola, M, Gios, L, Davis, R, Sanchez-Lambert, J, Aujean, S, Pinto, N, Farinella, F, Donisi, V, Niedzwiedzka-Stadnik, M, Rosinska, M, Pierson, A, Amaddeo, F and Health, LN (2019) A review of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and intersex (LGBTI) health and healthcare inequalities. The European Journal of Public Health 29(5), 974980.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Table 1. Descriptive statistics of the sample

Figure 1

Figure 1. Prevalence of mental disorders per M.I.N.I.

The results are expressed as prevalence rates with 95% confidence intervals.
Figure 2

Figure 2. Relative risk of mental disorder occurrence per M.I.N.I.

The results are expressed as adjusted odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals. The models were adjusted for age, gender, education, work status, income level, relationship status and size of the region of residence. Heterosexual individuals were used as reference category.
Figure 3

Figure 3. Mean PHQ-9 and GAD-7 scores

The results are expressed as averages with 95% confidence intervals.
Figure 4

Figure 4. Linear regression models of mental distress severity per PHQ-9 and GAD-7

The results are expressed as adjusted beta coefficients with 95% confidence intervals. The models were adjusted for age, gender, education, work status, income level, relationship status and size of the region of residence. Heterosexual individuals were used as reference category.
Figure 5

Table 2. Treatment gap prevalence for mental disorders established per M.I.N.I

Supplementary material: File

Pitoňák et al. supplementary material

Pitoňák et al. supplementary material
Download Pitoňák et al. supplementary material(File)
File 40.1 KB