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Mental Health Issues in Sexual and Gender Minority Youth (page 3)

By L. Carroll
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall

Gender Minority Youth

Estimates of attempted suicides by gender minorities range from a low of 17% (Brown & Rounsley, 1996) to a high of 50% (Israel & Tarver, 1997). DiCeglie, Freedman, McPherson, and Richardson (2002) conducted an audit of 124 cases seen in their gender clinic since 1989. The mean age at referral was 11 years. DiCeglie et al. reported that incidents of harassment and persecution were significantly more common in boys than in girls. Older children were more likely to report dislike of bodily sex characteristics than were younger children. DiCeglie et al. observed that their patients experienced “considerable difficulties with their relationships with adults and peers which may lead to significant isolation.” Girls in their sample reported more depression than boys and high rates of depression. DiCeglie et al. concluded that “gender identity disorder represents a high suicide risk.”

Results from a convenience sample of 54 gender minorities between 15 and 24 years of age were consistent with those observed in DiCeglie’s et al. clinical sample. Grossman and D’Augelli (2007) reported that 50% of their sample had serious thoughts about suicide and 25% had made at least one attempt. Verbal and physical abuse by parents and lower body esteem were significantly correlated with suicide attempts by these youth.

Swann and Herbert (1999) noted that transgender youth are at risk for self-harm, as many were apt to self-mutilate in order to bring about their own cross-gender body modification. Many engaged in self-destructive activities, such as cutting their breasts.

Harassment and Victimization

Sexual Minority Youth

Sexual minority youth reported higher rates of harassment, bullying, and victimization in schools than did their heterosexual counterparts (Bontempo & D’Augelli, 2002). Garofalo, Wolf, Kessel, Palfrey, and DuRant (1998) reported that one-third of their sample indicated they had been threatened with a weapon at school, in contrast to 7% of their heterosexual counterparts. The Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network (GLSEN), a national advocacy organization, indicated that among its national sample of sexual and gender minority youth, 42% had been physically harassed in school (GLSEN, 2001). Both national and regional studies (Murdock & Bolch, 2005; Peters, 2003) found that sexual minority youth were subjected to verbal harassment on a daily basis in school.

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