School of Psychology, Institute for Mental Health, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
School of Psychology, Self-Harm Research Group, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2021 Jan 22;16(1):e0245268. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0245268. eCollection 2021.
LGBTQ+ youth have higher rates of self-harm and suicide than cisgender, heterosexual peers. Less is known about prevalence of risks within these populations.
The first systematic review and meta-analysis to investigate the prevalence of risks among young people throughout the LGBTQ+ umbrella with experiences across the dimension of self-harm, suicidal ideation and suicide behaviour; and how they may differ between LGBTQ+ umbrella groups.
MEDLINE, Scopus, EMBASE, PsycINFO, and Web of Science searches were run to identify quantitative research papers (database inception to 31st January, 2020).
Articles included were empirical quantitative studies, which examined risks associated with self-harm, suicidal ideation or suicidal behaviour in LGBTQ+ young people (12-25 years).
2457 articles were identified for screening which was completed by two independent reviewers. 104 studies met inclusion criteria of which 40 had data which could be meta-analysed in a meaningful way. This analysis represents victimisation and mental health difficulties as risks among LGBTQ+ youth with self-harm and suicide experiences. Random-effects modelling was used for the main analyses with planned subgroup analyses.
Victimisation and mental health were key risk factors across the dimension self-harm and suicide identified through all analyses. A pooled prevalence of 0.36 was indicated for victimisation and 0.39 for mental health difficulties within LGBTQ+ young people with experiences of self-harm or suicide. Odds ratios were calculated which demonstrated particularly high levels of victimisation (3.74) and mental health difficulties (2.67) when compared to cisgender, heterosexual counterparts who also had these experiences.
Victimisation and mental health difficulties are highly prevalent among LGBTQ+ youth with experiences of self-harm and suicide. Due to inconsistency of reporting, further risk synthesis is limited. Given the global inclusion of studies, these results can be considered across countries and inform policy and suicide prevention initiatives.
CRD42019130037.
LGBTQ+ 青年的自残和自杀率高于顺性别、异性恋同龄人。关于这些人群中风险的流行程度知之甚少。
这是第一项系统综述和荟萃分析,旨在调查整个 LGBTQ+ 伞形群体中年轻人在自残、自杀意念和自杀行为方面的风险流行情况,以及他们在 LGBTQ+ 伞形群体之间可能存在的差异。
MEDLINE、Scopus、EMBASE、PsycINFO 和 Web of Science 搜索,以确定从数据库建立到 2020 年 1 月 31 日的定量研究论文。
包括经验性定量研究,这些研究调查了与 LGBTQ+ 年轻人的自残、自杀意念或自杀行为相关的风险。
对 2457 篇文章进行了筛选,由两名独立的审查员完成。104 项研究符合纳入标准,其中 40 项研究的数据可以以有意义的方式进行荟萃分析。本分析代表了具有自残和自杀经历的 LGBTQ+ 青年中的受害和心理健康困难等风险。主要分析采用随机效应模型,同时进行了计划的亚组分析。
在所有分析中,受害和心理健康都是与自残和自杀相关的关键风险因素。在有自残或自杀经历的 LGBTQ+ 年轻人中,受害的总体流行率为 0.36,心理健康困难的流行率为 0.39。与具有相同经历的顺性别、异性恋同龄人相比,计算出的比值表明,受害(3.74)和心理健康困难(2.67)的水平特别高。
在有自残和自杀经历的 LGBTQ+ 青年中,受害和心理健康困难非常普遍。由于报告的不一致性,进一步的风险综合受到限制。鉴于研究的全球纳入,这些结果可以在各国之间考虑,并为政策和自杀预防倡议提供信息。
PROSPERO 注册号:CRD42019130037。