Cigarette Smoking Among Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Filipino Youth: Findings From a National Sample

Authors

  • Eric Julian Manalastas Department of Psychology and Center for Women’s Studies University of the Philippines

Keywords:

cigarette smoking, tobacco use, LGBT health, health disparities, sexual minority youth

Abstract

Global research on lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) health has shown that sexual and gender minorities have
significantly higher rates of smoking than heterosexuals, using population-based surveys (Tang et al., 2004; Gruskin & Gordon,
2006; Gruskin et al., 2007) and meta-analysis (Ryan et al., 2001; Marshal et al., 2008; Lee, Griffin, & Melvin, 2009). This paper is
the first to explore the prevalence of tobacco use among Filipino lesbian, gay, and bisexual youth using nationally representative
data. Findings from the Young Adult Fertility and Sexuality Survey (YAFS3) show that young lesbian and bisexual Filipina women
had higher rates of ever-trying tobacco, had higher prevalence of current smoking, and smoked more cigarette sticks per day,
compared to heterosexual women. While sexual orientation did not appear to be associated with smoking among men across three measures of tobacco use, Filipino gay and bisexual youth had the highest cigarette smoking prevalence of all four subgroups.  of health risk behaviors such as cigarette smoking, as well as possible implications for tobacco use intervention, is discussed.

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Published

2022-10-06

How to Cite

Manalastas, E. J. (2022). Cigarette Smoking Among Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Filipino Youth: Findings From a National Sample. Silliman Journal, 53(1). Retrieved from https://sillimanjournal.su.edu.ph/index.php/sj/article/view/151