Bird K, Arcelus J, Matsagoura L, O'Shea B A, Townsend E
School of Psychology, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
Institute of Mental Health, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
Heliyon. 2024 Feb 14;10(5):e26074. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e26074. eCollection 2024 Mar 15.
Self-harm (any self-injury or -poisoning regardless of intent) is highly prevalent in transgender and gender diverse (TGD) populations. It is strongly associated with various adverse health and wellbeing outcomes, including suicide. Despite increased risk, TGD individuals' unique self-harm pathways are not well understood. Following PRISMA guidelines we conducted the first systematic review of risk and protective factors for self-harm in TGD people to identify targets for prevention and intervention.
We searched five electronic databases (PubMed, PsychInfo, Scopus, MEDLINE, and Web of Science) published from database inception to November 2023 for primary and secondary studies of risk and/or protective factors for self-harm thoughts and behaviours in TGD people. Data was extracted and study quality assessed using Newcastle-Ottawa Scales.
Overall, 78 studies published between 2007 and 2023 from 16 countries (N = 322,144) were eligible for inclusion. Narrative analysis identified six key risk factors for self-harm in TGD people (aged 7-98years) were identified. These are younger age, being assigned female at birth, illicit drug and alcohol use, sexual and physical assault, gender minority stressors (especially discrimination and victimisation), and depression or depressive symptomology. Three important protective factors were identified: social support, connectedness, and school safety. Other possible unique TGD protective factors against self-harm included: chosen name use, gender-identity concordant documentation, and protective state policies. Some evidence of publication bias regarding sample size, non-responders, and confounding variables was identified.
This systematic review indicates TGD people may experience a unique self-harm pathway. Importantly, the risk and protective factors we identified provide meaningful targets for intervention. TGD youth and those assigned female at birth are at increased risk. Encouraging TGD people to utilise and foster existing support networks, family/parent and peer support groups, and creating safe, supportive school environments may be critical for self-harm and suicide prevention strategies. Efforts to reduce drug and alcohol use and experiences of gender-based victimisation and discrimination are recommended to reduce self-harm in this high-risk group. Addressing depressive symptoms may reduce gender dysphoria and self-harm. The new evidence presented in this systematic review also indicates TGD people may experience unique pathways to self-harm related to the lack of social acceptance of their gender identity. However, robust longitudinal research which examines gender-specific factors is now necessary to establish this pathway.
自残行为(任何自我伤害或中毒行为,无论其意图如何)在跨性别和性别多样化(TGD)人群中极为普遍。它与各种不良健康和幸福结果密切相关,包括自杀。尽管风险增加,但TGD个体独特的自残途径尚未得到充分理解。我们遵循PRISMA指南,首次对TGD人群自残的风险和保护因素进行了系统综述,以确定预防和干预的目标。
我们检索了五个电子数据库(PubMed、PsychInfo、Scopus、MEDLINE和Web of Science),这些数据库从建库至2023年11月发表的关于TGD人群自残想法和行为的风险和/或保护因素的初级和二级研究。使用纽卡斯尔-渥太华量表提取数据并评估研究质量。
总体而言,2007年至2023年间来自16个国家(N = 322,144)发表的78项研究符合纳入标准。叙述性分析确定了TGD人群(年龄在7至98岁之间)自残的六个关键风险因素。这些因素包括年龄较小、出生时被指定为女性、使用非法药物和酒精、性侵犯和身体侵犯、性别少数群体压力源(尤其是歧视和受害)以及抑郁或抑郁症状。确定了三个重要的保护因素:社会支持、联系感和学校安全。其他可能针对TGD人群预防自残的独特保护因素包括:使用选定的名字、性别认同一致的文件以及保护性的国家政策。发现了一些关于样本量、无应答者和混杂变量的发表偏倚证据。
这项系统综述表明,TGD人群可能经历独特的自残途径。重要的是,我们确定的风险和保护因素为干预提供了有意义的目标。TGD青少年和出生时被指定为女性的人风险更高。鼓励TGD人群利用和培养现有的支持网络、家庭/父母和同伴支持团体,并营造安全、支持性的学校环境,对于自残和自杀预防策略可能至关重要。建议努力减少药物和酒精使用以及基于性别的受害和歧视经历,以减少这一高风险群体的自残行为。解决抑郁症状可能会减少性别焦虑和自残行为。本系统综述中提出的新证据还表明,TGD人群可能因社会对其性别认同缺乏接受而经历独特的自残途径。然而,现在需要进行有力的纵向研究来检验性别特异性因素,以确定这一途径。