Southwest Center, Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA.
Division of Adolescent Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA.
LGBT Health. 2023 Nov-Dec;10(8):617-628. doi: 10.1089/lgbt.2021.0404. Epub 2023 Jun 26.
The purpose of this study was to identify associations between school-based, health-promotive factors and nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) for sexual and gender minority youth and their heterosexual and cisgender peers. Using data from the 2019 New Mexico Youth Risk and Resiliency Survey ( = 17,811) and multilevel logistic regression to account for school-based clustering, we compared the effect of four school-based health-promotive factors on NSSI for stratified samples of lesbian/gay, bisexual, and gender-diverse (hereafter, gender minority [GM]) youth. Interactions were examined to evaluate the impact of school-based factors on NSSI for lesbian/gay, bisexual, (compared with heterosexual) and GM (compared with cisgender) youth. Stratified analyses showed that three school-based factors (adult at school who listens, adult at school who believes they will be successful, clear school rules) were associated with lower odds of reporting NSSI for lesbian/gay and bisexual youth, but not GM youth. Interaction effects showed that lesbian/gay youth demonstrated greater reductions in odds of NSSI when reporting school-based supports compared with heterosexual youth. Associations between school-based factors and NSSI were not significantly different for bisexual compared with heterosexual youth. GM youth appear to experience no health-promotive effect on NSSI of school-based factors. Our findings underscore the potential of schools to provide supportive resources that reduce the odds of NSSI for most youth (i.e., heterosexual and bisexual youth), but are particularly effective in reducing NSSI among lesbian/gay youth. However, more study is needed to understand the potential impact of school-based health-promotive factors on NSSI for GM youth.
本研究旨在确定学校健康促进因素与性少数群体和跨性别青年及其异性恋和顺性别同龄人之间非自杀性自伤(NSSI)之间的关联。本研究使用 2019 年新墨西哥州青年风险和恢复力调查(n=17811)的数据,并采用多层次逻辑回归来解释学校层面的聚类现象,我们比较了四个学校健康促进因素对有性别少数群体(GM)青年的分层样本的 NSSI 的影响。本研究还检验了学校因素对 LGB(与异性恋相比)和 GM(与顺性别相比)青年 NSSI 的影响的交互作用。分层分析表明,有三个学校因素(学校里倾听的成年人、学校里相信他们会成功的成年人、明确的学校规则)与同性恋和双性恋青年报告的 NSSI 的可能性降低有关,但与 GM 青年无关。交互作用表明,与异性恋青年相比,同性恋青年报告学校支持时,NSSI 的可能性降低幅度更大。与异性恋青年相比,双性恋青年与学校因素之间的 NSSI 关联没有显著差异。GM 青年似乎没有从学校因素对 NSSI 的健康促进作用中受益。我们的研究结果强调了学校提供支持性资源的潜力,这些资源可以降低大多数青年(即异性恋和双性恋青年)的 NSSI 可能性,但对于减少同性恋青年的 NSSI 尤为有效。然而,需要更多的研究来了解学校健康促进因素对 GM 青年 NSSI 的潜在影响。