Study protocol for the Rainbow Austrian Longitudinal Family (RALF) study: a longitudinal, multi-method, multi-rater investigation of risk and resilience factors in Austrian LGBTQ+ parent families
Betty Geidel, Magdalena Siegel, David Steyrl, Abbie E. Goldberg, Guy Bodenmann, Martina Zemp

TL;DR
The RALF study is a longitudinal investigation of risk and resilience factors in Austrian LGBTQ+ parent families, aiming to improve understanding and support for these families.
Contribution
RALF is the first prospective study to examine minority-specific factors in Austrian LGBTQ+ parent families using a multi-method approach.
Findings
The study will use machine learning to model complex interactions in LGBTQ+ parent family experiences.
Findings may inform policies and clinical practices supporting LGBTQ+ families in Austria.
A community advisory board ensures the study reflects lived experiences of LGBTQ+ families.
Abstract
Research on LGBTQ+ parent families is evolving to include a growing range of family systems, identities, methodologies, and topics. However, studies that examine minority-specific risk and resilience factors and their associations with within-family processes remain scarce, particularly outside a US-American context. Addressing these research gaps quantitatively poses challenges for researchers, because traditional modelling techniques based on (generalized) linear models are not ideally suited to capture the complexity and intersectionality of family experiences. Within this study protocol, we introduce the Rainbow Austrian Longitudinal Family (RALF) study. Its main goal is to comprehensively investigate general and minority-specific factors that affect the well-being of LGBTQ+ parent family members in Austria. RALF is a three-wave, longitudinal study over two years that examines risk…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLGBTQ Health, Identity, and Policy · Family Support in Illness · Intergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving
