# Trauma and Mental Health Among Latinx LGBT Immigrant Youth: A Mixed-Method Study

> **NIH NIH R36** · UNIV OF MARYLAND, COLLEGE PARK · 2020 · $60,076

## Abstract

The mental health needs of foreign-born (FB) Latinx lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) youth have
been rarely studied and deserve examination. FB Latinx LGBT youth are likely to be fleeing from trauma in their
countries of origin, experiencing in-transit trauma en route to the U.S., or experiencing acculturation-related
traumas upon arrival. The corresponding result is likely to be unusually high levels of stress and poor mental
health. Add to these traumas the strain of having a stigmatized LGBT identity, and mental health burden is likely
to be even more elevated. Thus, the intersectional impact of being a FB, Latinx, and LGBT youth likely leads to
serious poor mental health, warranting investigation into this underrepresented population. Indeed, pilot study
findings confirm that youth who are both Latinx and LGB (non-transgender) are at high risk for school and sexual
trauma and mental health burden, especially suicidality. However, trauma and mental health among youth who
are both Latinx and transgender remains largely unknown. Pilot study findings also indicate that FB Latinx youth
(non-LGBT) suffer from high rates of trauma and mental health burden, including suicidality. However, trauma
and mental health among FB Latinx LGBT youth remains predominantly unexplored. Aim 1 is to quantitatively
assess trauma and mental health among Latinx transgender youth using YRBS 2017 data. The main hypothesis
is that Latinx transgender youth will report the highest levels of school and sexual trauma, depression, and
suicidality compared to other youth defined by different racial, ethnic, sexual orientation, and gender identity
categories. Aim 2 is to qualitatively explore the lived experiences of trauma and mental health among FB Latinx
LGBT youth. To achieve Aim 2, 12 FB Latinx LGBT youth will be interviewed (or until saturation is reached) using
a narrative-design life-history approach, and findings will be analyzed thematically and chronologically. Aim 3 is
to integrate Aim 1 and Aim 2 findings to produce a meaningful meta-inference via a convergent-parallel mixed-
methods design framework and a comparative convergent-divergent synthesis strategy. The proposed mixed-
methods study will be guided by the minority stress theory, which emphasizes the impact of LGBT stigma on
stress and mental health, and the intersectionality framework, which emphasizes the impact of intersectional
social identity membership and oppressive experiences on mental health. The study will provide one of the first
quantitative subgroup analyses to date examining trauma and mental health specifically among Latinx
transgender youth and one of the first in-depth qualitative understandings of trauma and mental health among
FB Latinx LGBT youth. This research will help improve mental health care practice for Latinx LGBT youth
(especially transgender and FB) and encourage more investigation into their mental health. Lastly, this research
will help the principal investigato...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 9990004
- **Project number:** 1R36MH123043-01
- **Recipient organization:** UNIV OF MARYLAND, COLLEGE PARK
- **Principal Investigator:** John P. Salerno
- **Activity code:** R36 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $60,076
- **Award type:** 1
- **Project period:** 2020-05-01 → 2022-04-30

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/9990004

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 9990004, Trauma and Mental Health Among Latinx LGBT Immigrant Youth: A Mixed-Method Study (1R36MH123043-01). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-22 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/9990004. Licensed CC0.

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