Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences, Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, Rhode Island, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Aug 16;13(8):e0202330. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0202330. eCollection 2018.
In on-line forums, parents have reported that their children seemed to experience a sudden or rapid onset of gender dysphoria, appearing for the first time during puberty or even after its completion. Parents describe that the onset of gender dysphoria seemed to occur in the context of belonging to a peer group where one, multiple, or even all of the friends have become gender dysphoric and transgender-identified during the same timeframe. Parents also report that their children exhibited an increase in social media/internet use prior to disclosure of a transgender identity. Recently, clinicians have reported that post-puberty presentations of gender dysphoria in natal females that appear to be rapid in onset is a phenomenon that they are seeing more and more in their clinic. Academics have raised questions about the role of social media in the development of gender dysphoria. The purpose of this study was to collect data about parents’ observations, experiences, and perspectives about their adolescent and young adult (AYA) children showing signs of an apparent sudden or rapid onset of gender dysphoria that began during or after puberty, and develop hypotheses about factors that may contribute to the onset and/or expression of gender dysphoria among this demographic group.
For this descriptive, exploratory study, recruitment information with a link to a 90-question survey, consisting of multiple-choice, Likert-type and open-ended questions was placed on three websites where parents had reported sudden or rapid onsets of gender dysphoria occurring in their teen or young adult children. The study’s eligibility criteria included parental response that their child had a sudden or rapid onset of gender dysphoria and parental indication that their child’s gender dysphoria began during or after puberty. To maximize the chances of finding cases meeting eligibility criteria, the three websites (4thwavenow, transgender trend, and youthtranscriticalprofessionals) were selected for targeted recruitment. Website moderators and potential participants were encouraged to share the recruitment information and link to the survey with any individuals or communities that they thought might include eligible participants to expand the reach of the project through snowball sampling techniques. Data were collected anonymously via SurveyMonkey. Quantitative findings are presented as frequencies, percentages, ranges, means and/or medians. Open-ended responses from two questions were targeted for qualitative analysis of themes.
There were 256 parent-completed surveys that met study criteria. The AYA children described were predominantly natal female (82.8%) with a mean age of 16.4 years at the time of survey completion and a mean age of 15.2 when they announced a transgender-identification. Per parent report, 41% of the AYAs had expressed a non-heterosexual sexual orientation before identifying as transgender. Many (62.5%) of the AYAs had reportedly been diagnosed with at least one mental health disorder or neurodevelopmental disability prior to the onset of their gender dysphoria (range of the number of pre-existing diagnoses 0–7). In 36.8% of the friendship groups described, parent participants indicated that the majority of the members became transgender-identified. Parents reported subjective declines in their AYAs’ mental health (47.2%) and in parent-child relationships (57.3%) since the AYA “came out” and that AYAs expressed a range of behaviors that included: expressing distrust of non-transgender people (22.7%); stopping spending time with non-transgender friends (25.0%); trying to isolate themselves from their families (49.4%), and only trusting information about gender dysphoria from transgender sources (46.6%). Most (86.7%) of the parents reported that, along with the sudden or rapid onset of gender dysphoria, their child either had an increase in their social media/internet use, belonged to a friend group in which one or multiple friends became transgender-identified during a similar timeframe, or both.
This descriptive, exploratory study of parent reports provides valuable detailed information that allows for the generation of hypotheses about factors that may contribute to the onset and/or expression of gender dysphoria among AYAs. Emerging hypotheses include the possibility of a potential new subcategory of gender dysphoria (referred to as rapid-onset gender dysphoria) that has not yet been clinically validated and the possibility of social influences and maladaptive coping mechanisms. Parent-child conflict may also explain some of the findings. More research that includes data collection from AYAs, parents, clinicians and third party informants is needed to further explore the roles of social influence, maladaptive coping mechanisms, parental approaches, and family dynamics in the development and duration of gender dysphoria in adolescents and young adults.
在在线论坛上,家长们报告说,他们的孩子似乎突然或快速出现性别焦虑,出现在青春期或青春期结束后。家长们描述说,性别焦虑的发作似乎发生在属于一个同龄群体的背景下,在同一时间内,一个、多个甚至所有的朋友都变得性别焦虑和跨性别认同。家长们还报告说,他们的孩子在披露跨性别身份之前,社交媒体/互联网的使用有所增加。最近,临床医生报告说,青春期后出现的似乎快速发作的性别焦虑,在他们的诊所里越来越常见。学者们对社交媒体在性别焦虑发展中的作用提出了质疑。本研究的目的是收集关于父母对青春期和青年早期(AYA)儿童出现明显突然或快速发作性别焦虑的观察、经验和观点的数据,这些儿童的性别焦虑始于青春期或青春期后,并有假设可能导致这一年龄段群体的性别焦虑的发作和/或表达的因素。
这项描述性、探索性研究,在三个网站上发布了招聘信息,其中包括一个链接到一个 90 个问题的调查,调查由多项选择、李克特量表和开放式问题组成,这些网站是父母报告青少年或青年早期儿童突然或快速出现性别焦虑的地方。该研究的入选标准包括父母回应说他们的孩子有突然或快速发作的性别焦虑,以及父母表示他们孩子的性别焦虑始于青春期或青春期后。为了最大限度地发现符合入选标准的病例,选择了三个网站(4 期论坛、跨性别趋势和青年跨性别专业人士)进行有针对性的招聘。网站管理员和潜在参与者被鼓励与他们认为可能包括符合条件的参与者的任何个人或社区分享招聘信息和链接,以通过滚雪球抽样技术扩大项目的覆盖面。通过 SurveyMonkey 匿名收集数据。定量发现以频率、百分比、范围、平均值和/或中位数呈现。针对两个问题的开放式回答进行了定性分析主题。
有 256 名家长完成的调查符合研究标准。描述的 AYA 儿童主要是女性(82.8%),在完成调查时的平均年龄为 16.4 岁,宣布跨性别认同时的平均年龄为 15.2 岁。根据家长报告,41%的 AYA 在被诊断为性别焦虑之前表达了非异性恋性取向。许多(62.5%)的 AYA 在出现性别焦虑之前已经被诊断出至少一种心理健康障碍或神经发育障碍(已诊断出的疾病数量范围为 0-7)。在描述的 36.8%的友谊群体中,家长参与者表示,大多数成员被认定为跨性别者。父母报告说,自 AYA“出柜”以来,他们的 AYA 的心理健康(47.2%)和亲子关系(57.3%)主观下降,A YA 表达了一系列行为,包括:对非跨性别者表示不信任(22.7%);停止与非跨性别朋友交往(25.0%);试图与家人隔离(49.4%),只信任来自跨性别者的关于性别焦虑的信息(46.6%)。大多数(86.7%)的家长报告说,随着性别焦虑的突然或快速发作,他们的孩子要么增加了社交媒体/互联网的使用,要么加入了一个朋友群体,在类似的时间内,一个或多个朋友被认定为跨性别者,要么两者兼而有之。
这项对家长报告的描述性、探索性研究提供了有价值的详细信息,有助于提出可能导致 AYA 性别焦虑发作和/或表达的因素的假设。正在形成的假设包括可能存在一种尚未在临床上得到验证的新的性别焦虑亚类(称为快速发作性别焦虑),以及社会影响和适应不良的应对机制的可能性。父母与孩子的冲突也可能解释了一些发现。需要更多包括青少年、家长、临床医生和第三方信息提供者的数据收集研究,以进一步探讨社会影响、适应不良的应对机制、父母方法和家庭动态在青少年和青年早期性别焦虑的发展和持续时间中的作用。