Pride Month arrives at an interesting moment.
Over recent years, conversations about LGBTQ+ people have become increasingly visible in public life. Discussions about diversity and inclusion, gender identity, sexuality, and equality regularly feature in political debate, newspaper columns, and social media feeds. Issues that were once relatively niche topics are now discussed far more widely, often by people with very different perspectives.
That increased attention reflects how much society has changed. LGBTQ+ people are more visible than ever before, and many of the rights and protections that exist today would have been difficult to imagine just a few decades ago. Representation has increased across politics, sport, entertainment, and business. Younger generations are growing up in a world where discussions about sexuality and gender are often more open than they were for their parents or grandparents.
At the same time, greater visibility has not necessarily meant an end to disagreement. Many of these topics remain the subject of lively public debate, and there are often strongly held views on all sides. It can sometimes feel as though LGBTQ+ people are simultaneously more accepted and more scrutinised than ever before.
For healthcare professionals, however, an equally important question sits alongside the politics.
What impact does the wider social environment have on health?
It is an important question because health is shaped by far more than medicines, treatments, and hospital appointments. Increasingly, researchers recognise that our wellbeing is influenced by factors such as social connection, community support, relationships, and whether we feel that we belong.
In other words, health does not begin when we become ill.
It begins with the lives we lead every day.
When public health experts discuss the factors that influence health, they often focus on things such as housing, education, employment, and income. These are important determinants of health because they shape the circumstances in which people live.
Yet there is another factor that receives less attention, despite influencing many aspects of wellbeing – belonging.
Belonging is difficult to measure. It does not appear on a blood test, and it cannot be prescribed by a doctor. Nevertheless, it has a profound impact on how people experience their lives.
Feeling accepted by family, connected to friends and part of a wider community can improve confidence, resilience, and mental wellbeing. It can provide support during difficult periods and help people cope with stress. On the other hand, feeling isolated, excluded, or misunderstood can affect your mental health and contribute to loneliness.
This is not a uniquely LGBTQ+ experience. Most people can probably remember a time when they felt like an outsider, whether at school, at work or within a social group. Those experiences can be uncomfortable and emotionally draining even when they are temporary.
For people who feel different from those around them, however, questions of belonging can sometimes be more persistent.
Many LGBTQ+ people describe spending years trying to understand where they fit, whether they will be accepted and how much of themselves they feel comfortable sharing with others. While experiences vary enormously from person to person, the common thread is often the search for connection and acceptance.
This helps explain why community has played such an important role throughout LGBTQ+ history.
Long before LGBTQ+ people gained legal recognition and greater visibility in mainstream society, communities often provided support, friendship, and understanding.
Community groups, social spaces, support organisations, and informal networks helped people find others who shared similar experiences. These spaces were not simply places to socialise. For many people, they offered reassurance that they were not alone.
Although society has changed significantly, the importance of community has not disappeared.
Research into loneliness and social isolation has highlighted just how important social connection is for health. Strong social relationships are associated with better mental wellbeing, improved resilience, and higher levels of life satisfaction. Conversely, loneliness has become recognised as a significant public health challenge, with effects that can extend beyond mental health into physical wellbeing.
This growing understanding has even influenced healthcare itself. Initiatives such as social prescribing recognise that improving health is not always about medicine or clinical interventions. Sometimes it involves helping people connect with activities, groups, and communities that support their wellbeing.
The idea is simple but powerful.
People tend to do better when they feel connected to other people.
Last year, NHS England launched its first review into LGBTQ+ health inequalities, recognising evidence that disparities in health outcomes and healthcare experiences continue to exist.
The existence of those inequalities can sometimes be surprising to people who assume that equal access to healthcare should naturally lead to equal outcomes. The reality is often more complicated.
Healthcare does not exist in isolation from the rest of society. People’s experiences before they walk through the door of a GP surgery can influence how they engage with healthcare services once they are there.
Trust plays an important role.
People are more likely to seek help when they feel understood. They are more likely to engage with healthcare services when they feel comfortable discussing their lives and experiences. They are more likely to access preventative services when they believe those services are relevant to them.
This is one reason why healthcare organisations increasingly focus on patient experience as well as clinical outcomes.
Good healthcare is not only about delivering the correct treatment. It is also about creating environments in which people feel able to access care when they need it.
For LGBTQ+ people, as for many other groups, that experience can be shaped by wider social factors that extend far beyond the healthcare system itself.
One feature of modern life is that public conversations rarely stay confined to newspapers or television programmes.
Social media means that debates can follow us almost everywhere. Discussions that might once have been encountered occasionally can now appear repeatedly throughout the day, often amplified by algorithms that favour controversy and conflict.
This affects everyone, regardless of their views.
For some LGBTQ+ people, however, it can create a sense that aspects of their identity are constantly being discussed, analysed, or debated by others. Even when those conversations are conducted respectfully, they can still contribute to feelings of uncertainty or fatigue.
This is not about suggesting that difficult topics should not be discussed. Open societies depend on the ability to debate complex issues.
Rather, it is a reminder that public conversations do not take place in a vacuum. They are experienced by real people with real lives, relationships, and concerns.
The way people experience the world around them can influence their wellbeing, whether through feelings of connection and acceptance or through feelings of isolation and uncertainty.
Looking beyond Pride Month
Pride is often associated with parades, celebrations, and visibility, but perhaps its lasting significance lies somewhere deeper.
At its heart, Pride is also about belonging.
It is about creating opportunities for people to feel seen, welcomed, and connected to others. It is about reminding people that they are not alone in their experiences. It is about community in the broadest sense of the word.
These ideas may not always be discussed as health issues, yet they touch on many of the factors that public health experts increasingly recognise as essential to wellbeing.
Health is not simply the absence of illness. It is influenced by the quality of our relationships, the strength of our communities, and our sense of connection to the world around us.
As discussions about identity, inclusion, and social change continue, that may be one of the most valuable lessons Pride has to offer.
Not that everyone must think the same way.
Not that disagreement should disappear.
But that wellbeing is often rooted in something surprisingly simple – the human need to feel accepted, connected, and part of something larger than ourselves.
In an increasingly busy and divided world, that is a message that extends far beyond LGBTQ+ communities. It is a reminder that health is about more than healthcare, and that belonging remains one of the most powerful influences on wellbeing that any of us will ever experience.
If you’re LGBTQ+ and struggling with your mental health, you’re not alone. Support is available through the NHS, specialist charities, and community organisations.
You may find it helpful to:
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Speak to your GP about how you’re feeling.
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Self-refer for NHS Talking Therapies if you live in England.
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Contact a specialist LGBTQ+ support service.
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Reach out to a trusted friend, family member, or community group.
Useful organisations include:
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Mind LGBTQIA+ – information, support, and a comprehensive directory of LGBTQIA+ organisations and services.
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Switchboard LGBT+ Helpline – confidential listening service by phone, email, and online chat.
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LGBT Foundation – advice, information, and support services for LGBTQ+ people across the UK.
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MindOut – mental health support run by and for LGBTQ+ people, including online support and peer groups.
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Samaritans – available 24 hours a day if you need someone to talk to.

