JOURNAL ARTICLE

Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Individuals’ Perceptions

Jeanne Marie DorlandAnn R. Fischer

Year: 2001 Journal:   The Counseling Psychologist Vol: 29 (4)Pages: 532-547   Publisher: SAGE Publishing

Abstract

One hundred twenty-six participants who self-identified as gay, lesbian, or bisexual read a vignette of an intake counseling interview. Half of the participants read a vignette that contained heterosexist language, and the other group reviewed a vignette that was free of heterosexist language bias. The authors hypothesized that the heterosexist bias-free group would (a) perceive and rate the counselor more positively, (b) express a higher likelihood of returning to see the counselor, (c) express greater willingness to disclose personal information to the counselor, and (d) express greater comfort in disclosing sexual orientation to the counselor than would the group that reviewed the vignette with heterosexist bias. Results were consistent with all four hypotheses, with the largest effects occurring for utilization intent and for comfort disclosing sexual orientation.

Keywords:
Vignette Sexual orientation Psychology Lesbian Homosexuality Social psychology Sexual minority Perception Self-disclosure Sexual identity Clinical psychology Human sexuality Gender studies

Metrics

30
Cited By
0.85
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
35
Refs
0.78
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

LGBTQ Health, Identity, and Policy
Social Sciences →  Psychology →  Social Psychology
Social and Intergroup Psychology
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Sociology and Political Science
Reproductive Health and Technologies
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Reproductive Medicine
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