Covid gays

If you’re here because of the click-bait title…gotchya! COVID-19 did not “turn” me gay. I didn’t catch Corona and then all of a sudden hold a FIERCE need to see what a woman tastes like. You cannot be “turned” gay; I know that. You know that. We all realize that, hopefully. And if you don’t, go make friends with a homosexual person and question them yourself. It’s 2020. Get it together. Woke up.

If anything, I’d now slap on that “bisexual” label for myself—but we won’t get into how problematic labels are right now. Which brings me to the point of this missive: I struggled with this realization. While you guys were jerking off to free Porn-Hub (do it to it, boo!) and wondering whether you’d end up like Piggy from Lord of Flies when Trump’s Marshall Law comes knocking, I set up out that I was 100% totally and entirely capable of developing feelings for a teen. The first teen I’ve ever felt that way about, in fact, and trust me when I tell you I’ve felt it everywhere. And I do mean everywhere.

Raised in a conservative bible-thumping household, creature gay was, to put it lightly, “frowned upon”. I was taught that same sex anything, if it wasn’t purely pla

covid gays

The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on LGBT People

Key Findings

There has been minute data on how the coronavirus pandemic has impacted the lives of queer woman , gay, bisexual, and transgender individuals (LGBT) in the U.S. Drawing on previous research indicating that LGBT individuals are at greater peril of both COVID-19 health and economic outcomes, this study examines the reported experiences from self-identified LGBT individuals from two months of the KFF COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor and finds that LGBT people have experienced the COVID-19 pandemic differently than non-LGBT people, including creature harder hit in some areas:

  • Economic: A larger share of LGBT adults compared to non-LGBT adults report that they or someone in their household has experienced COVID-era position loss (56% v. 44%).
  • Mental health: Three-fourths of LGBT people (74%) say panic and stress from the pandemic has had a negative impact on their mental health, compared to 49% of those who are not LGBT, and are more likely to say that negative impact has been major (49% v 23%).
  • Views: One-third (34%) of LGBT adults say the news has generally underestimated the seriousness of the pandemic (compared to 23% of no

    The Impact of the Drop 2020 COVID-19 Surge on LGBT Adults in the US

    Executive Summary

    Prior Williams Institute research has shown that many LGBT adults are at higher risk of serious illness related to COVID-19 and its resulting negative economic impacts. This report provides new statistics on the impact of COVID-19 on LGBT people collected in the drop of 2020.

    Drawing upon facts collected by Ipsos from a nationally representative sample of over 12,000 adults between August 21, 2020 to December 21, 2020, our main finding is that the impact of the pandemic on LGBT communities cannot be fully understood without considering race and ethnicity as successfully as sexual orientation and gender identity. In concise, across a number of indicators, LGBT people of color are more likely to experience the health and economic impacts of COVID-19 than non-LGBT Colorless people. They are also more likely to shadow public health measures, such as getting tested for COVID-19, social distancing, and wearing masks than non-LGBT White people.

    Questions that measure respondents’ trust in government and public health officials regarding COVID-19 show that LGBT people were less likely to trust the Trump administra

    CDC Releases Report Confirming Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual person People at Greater Uncertainty of COVID-19 Illness, Calls for More Data Collection

    Yesterday, the Journal of the American Medical Associationpublished research showing a connection between people living with HIV and increased hospitalization and death rates among New York State residents. We have yet to see national data on the impact of COVID-19 on people living with HIV.

    At the beginning of the pandemic, in Rally 2020, HRC issued a research brief, “The Lives and Livelihoods of Many in the LGBTQ Group are at Risk Amidst COVID-19 Crisis,” that outlined the elevated health and economic risks LGBTQ people face during the COVID-19 pandemic. Many in the LGBTQ community are particularly vulnerable, as they are less likely to contain health coverage and are more likely to smoke or have a chronic illness like asthma. Those predictions are confirmed in this new CDC report.

    HRC’s 2020 research supports the CDC’s findings and shows similar findings for trans people. Key statistics from that report note the unique susceptibility of the LGBTQ community to COVID-19.

    • 37% of LGBTQ elder smokers smoke every time compared to 27%

      Gay and lesbian adults had higher COVID-19 vaccination rates than heterosexual adults: CDC

      Gay and lesbian adults are more likely to have been vaccinated against COVID-19 than heterosexual adults, federal officials said Thursday.

      A new study from the Centers for Disease Rule and Prevention found 85.4% of gay and queer woman Americans above age 18 had received at least one vaccine dose as of October 2021.

      By comparison, 76.3% of heterosexuals reported receiving at least an initial dose by the same date.

      Additionally, gay and lesbian adults were more likely to be concerned about COVID-19 and to believe in the protection and efficacy of vaccines.

      "We know that the prevalence of certain health conditions associated with severe COVID-19 illness, such as cancer, smoking, and obesity, are higher in LGBT populations, and access to health care continues to be an issue for some people in the LGBT community," Dr. A.D. McNaghten, a member of the CDC’s COVID-19 Emergency Response Team and corresponding creator of the study, told ABC News. "We wanted to see if vaccination coverage among LGBT persons was the same as non-LGBT persons."

      For the survey, CDC researcher