LGBT College Students
Use and Abuse of Alcohol and Other Drugs
*The event announcement below is for UMBC faculty and staff members only.
Moderator: Shane Windmeyer, Campus Pride
Guest Presenter: Genevieve Weber Gilmore, Ph.D., LMHC and Assistant Professor of Counselor Education, Hofstra University & QRIHE, Campus Pride
Description:LGBT students are at higher risk for alcohol and other drug use and abuse when compared with their heterosexual counterparts. This webinar will outline the risk factors (i.e., experiences with homophobic campus climate) that place LGBT students at higher risk as well as the impact of such behaviors on their emotional, academic, social, and professional lives. Skills for intervention and treatment options will be discussed. Various research studies will be cited throughout the presentation.
Participants will gain knowledge on:
• Critical research and recent
findings on LGBT students high at-risk behaviors involving LGBT
substance use and abuse;
• Unique risk factors for alcohol and other drug use and abuse among LGBT students;
• The differences in rates of alcohol
and other drug use and abuse between LGBT students and heterosexual
students;
• The intersection between coming out and alcohol and drug use and abuse;
• The impact of alcohol and other drug use and abuse on various aspects of their lives;
• Basic intervention skills for
intervention and psychoeducation; treatment options should an LGBT
student require treatment.
Genevieve Weber Gilmore, Ph.D., LMHC, is an Assistant Professor of Counselor Education at Hofstra University, and a Licensed Mental Health Counselor in the State of New York with a specialization in Substance Abuse. Dr. Weber Gilmore teaches a variety of courses related to the training of professional counselors including group counseling, multicultural counseling, psychopathology, and psychopharmacology and treatment planning. In her research and professional presentations, Dr. Weber Gilmore focuses on the impact of homophobia on the lives of LGBT individuals, with particular attention to the relationship between homophobia, internalized homophobia, and substance abuse among LGBT people.