Transitions: Working with GLBTQ Youth Volume 14, No. 4, June 2002
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By Meg Earls, Grants Manager, Advocates for Youth In the United States, GLBTQ youth often lack positive role models and face serious problems in a largely homophobic society. Numerous studies indicate that societal homophobia increases GLBT youth's risk for substance use, dropping out of school, homelessness, sexual risk-taking, and attempting suicide. Youth-serving professionals owe all the young people in their programs the opportunity to build their skills and self-confidence and to succeed; but many professionals are unaware of the risks faced by GLBTQ youth.
GLBT youth realize their sexual orientation early in life.
- Research suggests that sexual orientation may be determined during childhood. Many GLBTQ individuals report a feeling of being "different" from an early age.4 Prospective studies with adolescents show gay males and lesbians self-identifying at about age 16.5 Anecdotal evidence also suggests that many transgender youth have felt, from an early age, uncomfortable with their biological gender and/or expected gender role.6
- The age of coming out may be dropping as increased access to information and services for GLBTQ youth, particularly in urban areas, provides greater opportunities for self-affirmation and socialization.5
Openly identifying as GLBT may mean rejection by family, friends, and peers at school.
- After coming out to their family, or being discovered, many GLBT youth are thrown out of their homes, face physical, emotional, and/or sexual abuse, or become the focus of family disfunction.2
- GLBT youth face hostility and violence at school. In one nationwide survey, over 83 percent of GLBT students reported verbal harassment while 90 percent of the youth said that other students never or rarely intervened. Forty-eight percent of GLBT youth of color reported verbal harassment on the basis of both orientation and ethnicity. Seventy-four percent of transgender students reported sexual harassment. Over 21 percent of all GLBT youth reported being punched, kicked, or injured with a weapon because of their sexual orientation while 42 percent reported being shoved or pushed.7 GLBT students are three times more likely than heterosexual students to miss school because they feel unsafe.1
GLBTQ youth of color are often at disproportionate risk for abuse, suicide, and HIV infection.
- In one survey, 61 percent of GLBT youth of color reported being victims of violence from family, and 40 percent, from peers and strangers; 41 percent of females and 35 percent of males had attempted suicide.2
- In one recent study of young men who have sex with men (YMSM), 16.9 percent of men of mixed race/ ethnicity who reported black background were HIV-infected. HIV prevalence was also higher among African Americans, men of mixed or other race/ethnicity, and Hispanics than among Asian American/Pacific Islanders or whites (14.1, 12.6, and 6.9 percent versus 3.0 and 3.3 percent, respectively).8
Research suggests that societal homophobia results in high rates of suicide and suicide attempts, substance abuse, and risk for HIV and other sexually transmitted infections (STIs).
- Numerous studies establish clear links between a youth's sexual orientation and the likelihood of attempting suicide. In a recent survey, GLB and questioning students were more than twice as likely, and gay and bisexual males were nearly four times as likely, as their heterosexual peers to have attempted suicide.9
- A study of public high school students found that GLB students reported far more use of crack cocaine, marijuana, alcohol, and inhalants than did their heterosexual peers. GLB students were also more likely to report cocaine use before age 13 than were their heterosexual peers.10
- In one recent study, during the previous six months 90 percent of YMSM had sex with at least one man, and 23 percent had sex with at least five men. Overall, 41 percent reported unprotected anal sex.8
If thrown out of their homes, many GLBT youth face life-threatening situations living on the streets.
- Estimates vary, but service providers agree that GLBT youth make up a large and disproportionate share of homeless youth (25 to 40 percent).5
- In efforts to survive on the street, homeless youth often engage in survival sex and are at increased risk for rape, beatings, and STIs, including HIV.2
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Transitions (ISSN 1097-1254) © 2002, is a quarterly publication of Advocates for Youth—Helping young people make safe and responsible decisions about sex. For permission to reprint, contact Transitions' editor at 202.419.3420. Editor: Sue Alford
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