For Researchers

Are you an academic researcher or citizen scientist? Do you want to know more about using data from The PRIDE Study and/or the All of Us Research Program? You’re in the right place!

 The PRIDE Study Ancillary Studies

Through The PRIDE Study's ancillary studies, a wide variety of investigators working on academic or community-based projects related to LGBTQIA+ health can apply to work collaboratively with The PRIDE Study team.

Benefits of working with The PRIDE Study Data:

  • Focuses on LGBTQIA+ populations

  • Detailed questions on LGBTQIA+ identities and health (e.g., gender affirming care)

  • Measures that are specific for LGBTQIA+ people (e.g., discrimination, minority stress)

  • Quantitative and Qualitative data

  • Nationwide data

  • Longitudinal data are available

  • Adults (18+) across the lifespan

  • Large sample sizes

Explore community friendly summaries of The PRIDE Study publications:
pridestudy.org/research

View, download, and share available infographics for The PRIDE Study publications:
Access the infographics here (Dropbox)

Explore a complete listing of The PRIDE Study ancillary studies currently in progress:
 goto.stanford.edu/PrideStudyAs

Explore The PRIDE Study survey questions and aggregate-level data: 
pridestudy.tools

Learn more about applying and desired ancillary study topics:

 All of Us Researcher Workbench

The National Institutes of Health’s All of Us Research Program is building one of the largest biomedical data resources of its kind. The All of Us Researcher Workbench stores health data from a diverse group of participants from across the United States.

LGBTQIA+ Health Researchers Speak:
Working with All of Us Data

LGBTQIA+ health researchers and PRIDEnet staff, share insights on inclusive health research practices and the transformative impact of the All of Us Research Program on LGBTQIA+ health studies.

Search the Data Browser to get a sense of All of Us data available for research.

Visit the
Research Projects Directory to explore ongoing research with All of Us data. You can search terms like "LGBT," "LGBTQ," "LGBTQIA," "LGB," "SGM," or "Sexual and Gender Minority" to see relevant research projects.

Read publications that use All of Us data.

Register for the Researcher Workbench to access data and tools to conduct health research and improve understanding of health and disease.

Researchers’ institutions must first have a Data and Use Registration Agreement (DURA) in place with All of Us before they can register for the Researcher Workbench. You can search or browse the list of registered institutions to confirm if your institution has a DURA in place. If your institution does not have a DURA in place, you may start the process to get one on ResearchAllofUs.org

Articles about LGBTQIA+ focused research using All of Us data: