Parodi Katharine B, Holt Melissa K, Green Jennifer Greif, Katz-Wise Sabra L, Shah Tanvi N, Kraus Aidan D, Xuan Ziming
Department of Counseling Psychology and Applied Human Development, Boston University, USA.
Department of Counseling Psychology and Applied Human Development, Boston University, USA.
J Sch Psychol. 2022 Feb;90:135-149. doi: 10.1016/j.jsp.2021.11.004. Epub 2021 Dec 16.
Transgender and gender diverse youth (TGD) report high rates of mental health concerns. However, there is reason to expect that among TGD youth there is variation in mental health experiences related to specific aspects of gender identity. Furthermore, although certain school characteristics are related to improved mental health for sexual minority youth, it is unclear whether the same school characteristics are associated with improved mental health for TGD youth and whether gender identity moderates the associations between school characteristics and mental health. Using baseline data from Project AVANT, a longitudinal study of TGD youth ages 14-18 years in the United States (N = 252), we report on several mental health outcomes (i.e., depression, anxiety, nonsuicidal self-injury, and PTSD), with attention to differences by gender identity. Secondly, we examined associations of three protective school-related factors (i.e., school-connectedness, presence of a Gay-Straight or Gender-Sexuality Alliance [GSA], and state mandated protections for sexual and gender minority students) with TGD youth mental health. TGD youth reported elevated levels of anxious and depressive symptoms, with nonbinary youth assigned female at birth reporting higher mean depressive symptoms relative to transgender females. Among the aggregate sample of TGD youth, 69.9% reported clinically significant anxiety, 57.9% reported clinically significant depression, 56.7% reported nonsuicidal self-injury, and 46.4% met screening criteria for posttraumatic stress disorder. Despite a small effect size, greater school-connectedness was significantly associated with fewer mental health concerns and gender identity moderated the association between school-connectedness and number of anxiety symptoms. Gender identity also moderated the association between presence of a GSA and number of anxious symptoms, depressive symptoms, and clinically significant depression, respectively. No significant associations of state-level protections and mental health outcomes were detected. Findings highlight the importance of improving mental health and fostering GSA-engagement and school-connectedness among TGD youth. Implications for school psychologists are discussed.
跨性别及性别多样化青少年(TGD)报告称心理健康问题发生率很高。然而,有理由预期,在TGD青少年中,与性别认同特定方面相关的心理健康体验存在差异。此外,尽管某些学校特征与性少数群体青少年心理健康状况的改善有关,但尚不清楚相同的学校特征是否与TGD青少年心理健康状况的改善相关,以及性别认同是否会调节学校特征与心理健康之间的关联。利用“先锋计划”的基线数据,该研究对美国14至18岁的TGD青少年进行了纵向研究(N = 252),我们报告了几种心理健康结果(即抑郁、焦虑、非自杀性自伤和创伤后应激障碍),并关注性别认同方面的差异。其次,我们研究了三个与学校相关的保护因素(即学校归属感、是否存在同性恋-异性恋或性别-性取向联盟[GSA]以及州政府对性少数和性别少数学生的法定保护)与TGD青少年心理健康之间的关联。TGD青少年报告的焦虑和抑郁症状水平较高,出生时被指定为女性的非二元性青少年报告的平均抑郁症状相对于跨性别女性更高。在TGD青少年的总体样本中,69.9%报告有临床显著焦虑,57.9%报告有临床显著抑郁,56.7%报告有非自杀性自伤,46.4%符合创伤后应激障碍筛查标准。尽管效应量较小,但更强的学校归属感与较少的心理健康问题显著相关,性别认同调节了学校归属感与焦虑症状数量之间的关联。性别认同还分别调节了GSA的存在与焦虑症状数量、抑郁症状数量以及临床显著抑郁之间的关联。未检测到州级保护与心理健康结果之间的显著关联。研究结果凸显了改善TGD青少年心理健康以及促进他们参与GSA和增强学校归属感的重要性。文中还讨论了对学校心理学家的启示。