Aqua 300 - Symposia
Jul 14, 2023 01:45 PM - 03:15 PM(America/Los_Angeles)
20230714T1345 20230714T1515 America/Los_Angeles Symposium #4: Leading with an Intersectional, Racial Justice Approach in LGBT Research

In this symposium we will share important intersectional considerations for psychological health research. Paper 1 focuses on the importance of centering transgender and nonbinary health through the use of an intersectional, racial justice lens. The second paper focuses on polysexual Latinxs during the COVID-19 pandemic, sharing critical health and socio-economic health data that to our knowledge, has yet to be considered in the larger psychology and health research fields. The final, third paper focuses on a new 17.5mil California initiative that aims to address health disparities among LGBTQ+ women. The overarching goal of this initiative is to connect LGBTQ+ women and nonbinary people to critical, life saving mental and physical health resources. However, given the long-standing barriers in health access for the LGBTQ+ community, our team argues that the initiative must be led from a racial justice lens or runs the risk of further marginalizing the most vulnerable members of the LGBTQ+ community. The team presenting paper 3 are the PI and core research/evaluation team of the California initiative.

Aqua 300 - Symposia 2023 APA Division 45 Research Conference researchconference@division45.org
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In this symposium we will share important intersectional considerations for psychological health research. Paper 1 focuses on the importance of centering transgender and nonbinary health through the use of an intersectional, racial justice lens. The second paper focuses on polysexual Latinxs during the COVID-19 pandemic, sharing critical health and socio-economic health data that to our knowledge, has yet to be considered in the larger psychology and health research fields. The final, third paper focuses on a new 17.5mil California initiative that aims to address health disparities among LGBTQ+ women. The overarching goal of this initiative is to connect LGBTQ+ women and nonbinary people to critical, life saving mental and physical health resources. However, given the long-standing barriers in health access for the LGBTQ+ community, our team argues that the initiative must be led from a racial justice lens or runs the risk of further marginalizing the most vulnerable members of the LGBTQ+ community. The team presenting paper 3 are the PI and core research/evaluation team of the California initiative.

Associate Professor
,
University of California, Santa Barbara
No moderator for this session!
Research Assistant
,
University of Central Florida
Doctoral Student
,
George Fox University
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