Development and Preliminary Validation of the Sexual Minority Identity Emotion Scale

  • Jacob Goffnett
  • , Samantha Robinson
  • , Anna Hamaker
  • , Mohammod Mahmudur Rahman
  • , Sheree M. Schrager
  • , Jeremy T. Goldbach

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Emotions influence health behaviors and outcomes, yet little research has examined the emotion–health relationship among sexual minorities. The few studies in this area have used general measures of feelings without regard for identity, despite the literature positing emotions as culturally and contextually specific. This critical limitation obscures inferences made in studies that have found emotions to predict mental health outcomes for sexual minorities. This study begins to address this gap by developing and examining the preliminary validation of the Sexual Minority Identity Emotion Scale, a measure of shame and pride specific to the identity experiences of sexual minority adolescents. The initial pool of items emerged from a qualitative study and was refined through a multistep review. The measurement’s factor structure and criterion validity were examined using a nationwide sample of 273 sexual minority adolescents from the United States. The scale has four factors with strong internal reliability, adequate criterion validity, and utility in health research.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)171-184
Number of pages14
JournalAdolescents
Volume4
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2024

Keywords

  • adolescent
  • emotions
  • health behavior
  • psychometrics
  • sexual minority
  • shame

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