# From Stigma to Strength: Tracking Post-Traumatic Growth in Older Sexual Minorities

**Authors:** Michael Vale

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.2402 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study explores how older sexual minorities experience personal growth after adversity and develops a new tool to measure this growth.

## Contribution

The study introduces a new measure for post-traumatic growth specific to sexual minorities and examines its correlates.

## Key findings

- A five-factor PTG measure was validated with strong internal consistency.
- PTG was linked to experiences of discrimination and adaptive coping strategies in older sexual minorities.
- PTG was not correlated with age but was associated with psychosocial resources like self-compassion and religious coping.

## Abstract

Post-traumatic growth (PTG) refers to the personal development that arises from overcoming adversity and has historically been overlooked in older sexual minorities (e.g., lesbian, gay, bisexual individuals). Throughout their lives, older sexual minorities have faced heightened vulnerability to marginalization (e.g., discrimination), which has been linked to worse health outcomes. However, over time, they may develop a sense of adaptation to these stigmatizing experiences, establishing a potential source of resilience (i.e., PTG). Yet, no existing scales specifically capture PTG in queer populations. This study aimed to (1) establish a PTG measure for sexual minorities and (2) examine PTG’s correlates in younger (N = 107, ages 18–39) and middle-aged/older (N = 216, ages 40–90) sexual minorities. Exploratory factor analysis supported the hypothesized five-factor structure with strong internal consistency (α = .88). Although PTG was not correlated with age (p = .21), it was associated with microaggressions (r = .16, p < .05), discrimination (r = .24, p < .001), and victimization (r = .24, p < .001) across age groups. PTG was also associated with other adaptive psychosocial resources, such as self-compassion (r= .20, p<.05), active coping (r= .21, p<.05), religious coping (r= .36, p<.001), and positive reframing (r= .33, p<.001), but only among the older sexual minorities. These results highlight that PTG may play a unique role in promoting well-being for this health disparity group and serve as a catalyst for future research on PTG in this population. Specifically, researchers should explore interventions that harness PTG to enhance well-being.

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12760579