R01AA029989
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Long-Term and Daily Associations Among Intersectional Minority Stress, Structural Oppression, and Alcohol Use and Misuse Among Sexual Minority Adolescents of Color - Project Summary/Abstract
Disparities in alcohol and other substance (AOD) use and misuse are well documented between sexual minority adolescents (SMA) and their heterosexual peers. SMA of color also have higher rates of AOD use and misuse than heterosexual peers of the same race/ethnicity and, to some extent, their white SMA peers.
Daily stigma and discrimination-related stressors specific to their marginalized identities (i.e., minority stressors, racism-based stressors) contribute to health disparities among SMA of color. These stressors occur at the interpersonal level (e.g., discrimination) and are reinforced at the structural level (e.g., anti-gay laws or racist institutional policies). Minority stress at a single axis of identity is directly correlated with AOD use and misuse among sexual and racial/ethnic minority populations. Similarly, structural oppression (i.e., structural heterosexism or racism) during adolescence has long-lasting health effects, including AOD use and misuse. However, this work rarely takes an intersectional lens that considers both sexual orientation and race/ethnicity.
Although mounting cross-sectional and recent but limited longitudinal evidence implicates minority stress as a key contributor to disparities in AOD use and misuse, the prospective, daily, and chronic impact of these stressors on SMA of color's AOD use and misuse across adolescence is largely unknown. There is also a lack of research examining the impact of structural oppression on SMA of color's AOD use, how it may play a key etiological role in accelerating the progression of AOD use and misuse over adolescence, and how it may impact the long-term and daily associations between intersectional minority stress and AOD use and misuse in SMA of color's daily lives. In addition, little is known about protective factors between minority stress and AOD use and misuse, which is needed to inform prevention and treatment interventions.
Relying on our investigator's team methodological, theoretical, analytic, and clinical expertise and pilot work, we propose a rigorous and innovative study of intersectional stress and structural oppression and how they relate to AOD use and misuse among SMA of color. Using a measurement-burst design, a combination of longitudinal and daily diary methods, our aims are to:
1) Test the prospective associations between intersectional stress and structural oppression and AOD use and misuse among a national sample of SMA of color over 2.5 years (N=950) with 6-month time-points;
2) Test the daily associations between within-person fluctuations of intersectional stress and AOD craving, use, misuse, and problems among the sample over 10 days at each 6-month time point;
3) Test protective and risk factors that attenuate or exacerbate the associations between intersectional stress and AOD use and misuse over adolescence across the 2.5 years and in daily life.
The results will allow for a more precise understanding of minority stress, structural oppression, and AOD use and misuse in this population and inform clinical assessment and the development of culturally sensitive interventions for SMA of color.
Disparities in alcohol and other substance (AOD) use and misuse are well documented between sexual minority adolescents (SMA) and their heterosexual peers. SMA of color also have higher rates of AOD use and misuse than heterosexual peers of the same race/ethnicity and, to some extent, their white SMA peers.
Daily stigma and discrimination-related stressors specific to their marginalized identities (i.e., minority stressors, racism-based stressors) contribute to health disparities among SMA of color. These stressors occur at the interpersonal level (e.g., discrimination) and are reinforced at the structural level (e.g., anti-gay laws or racist institutional policies). Minority stress at a single axis of identity is directly correlated with AOD use and misuse among sexual and racial/ethnic minority populations. Similarly, structural oppression (i.e., structural heterosexism or racism) during adolescence has long-lasting health effects, including AOD use and misuse. However, this work rarely takes an intersectional lens that considers both sexual orientation and race/ethnicity.
Although mounting cross-sectional and recent but limited longitudinal evidence implicates minority stress as a key contributor to disparities in AOD use and misuse, the prospective, daily, and chronic impact of these stressors on SMA of color's AOD use and misuse across adolescence is largely unknown. There is also a lack of research examining the impact of structural oppression on SMA of color's AOD use, how it may play a key etiological role in accelerating the progression of AOD use and misuse over adolescence, and how it may impact the long-term and daily associations between intersectional minority stress and AOD use and misuse in SMA of color's daily lives. In addition, little is known about protective factors between minority stress and AOD use and misuse, which is needed to inform prevention and treatment interventions.
Relying on our investigator's team methodological, theoretical, analytic, and clinical expertise and pilot work, we propose a rigorous and innovative study of intersectional stress and structural oppression and how they relate to AOD use and misuse among SMA of color. Using a measurement-burst design, a combination of longitudinal and daily diary methods, our aims are to:
1) Test the prospective associations between intersectional stress and structural oppression and AOD use and misuse among a national sample of SMA of color over 2.5 years (N=950) with 6-month time-points;
2) Test the daily associations between within-person fluctuations of intersectional stress and AOD craving, use, misuse, and problems among the sample over 10 days at each 6-month time point;
3) Test protective and risk factors that attenuate or exacerbate the associations between intersectional stress and AOD use and misuse over adolescence across the 2.5 years and in daily life.
The results will allow for a more precise understanding of minority stress, structural oppression, and AOD use and misuse in this population and inform clinical assessment and the development of culturally sensitive interventions for SMA of color.
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
College Park,
Maryland
207425103
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Termination This project grant was reported on the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) partial or complete termation list as of its last report October 2025. See All
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 431% from $681,498 to $3,616,824.
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 431% from $681,498 to $3,616,824.
College Park University Of Maryland was awarded
Intersectional Stress & AOD Use Among SMA of Color
Project Grant R01AA029989
worth $3,616,824
from National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism in May 2022 with work to be completed primarily in College Park Maryland United States.
The grant
has a duration of 5 years and
was awarded through assistance program 93.273 Alcohol Research Programs.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity NIH Research Project Grant (Parent R01 Clinical Trial Not Allowed).
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 5/21/26
Period of Performance
5/10/22
Start Date
4/30/27
End Date
Funding Split
$3.6M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$3.6M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for R01AA029989
Transaction History
Modifications to R01AA029989
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
R01AA029989
SAI Number
R01AA029989-1832700228
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Public/State Controlled Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
75N500 NIH National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
Funding Office
75N500 NIH National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
Awardee UEI
NPU8ULVAAS23
Awardee CAGE
0UB92
Performance District
MD-04
Senators
Benjamin Cardin
Chris Van Hollen
Chris Van Hollen
Budget Funding
| Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0894) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $1,436,315 | 100% |
Modified: 5/21/26