Film
to help families prevent LGBT youth suicides
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[April 02, 2016]
By Andrew M. Seaman
(Reuters Health) - When families reject their lesbian, gay, bisexual or
transgender (LGBT) children, it dramatically increases the youths' risk
for suicide. Experts hope a new film aimed at families - religious
families in particular - will help ease the tensions that drive those
youngsters to kill themselves.
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The 20-minute film, called "Families are Forever," follows the
journey of a devout Mormon family whose 13-year-old son comes out as
gay. The family discusses its reactions, decisions and how they
reconciled their beliefs with their son's announcement.
The film and supporting materials, part of a growing series, quickly
get to the heart of the matter, said Caitlin Ryan, director of the
Family Acceptance Project at San Francisco State University, which
produced the film.
"We have to give people a way to understand how . . . they can
support a LGBT child even if it’s not in sync with their religious
beliefs or cultural values" Ryan told Reuters Health.
The Family Acceptance Project had previously found that LGBT youth
who report high levels of family rejection are more than eight times
more likely to report attempting suicide, compared to similar kids
whose families don't reject them.
Family acceptance of LGBT children is tied to better physical and
mental health, however.
The multimedia package, available in English and Spanish, is meant
to help families identify and change behaviors that make their LGBT
child feel rejected and to increase supportive behaviors, Ryan said.
Even though parents may be engaging in rejecting behaviors out of
care or concern, they are nevertheless "contributing to health
risks, conflict and estrangement in the family," said Ryan.
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The film and its accompanying discussion guide and family education
workbook were added in March to the Suicide Prevention Resource
Center Best Practice Registry. Ann Hass, a senior consultant to the
American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, told Reuters Health that
the registry is a collection of research-based and peer-reviewed
suicide prevention programs, selected in "a pretty rigorous
process."
"The addition of Caitlin Ryan’s work to the registry is such a step
forward in terms of the ability people in communities to do some
LGBT-related suicide prevention," said Hass.
So far, this is the only LGBT-related program in the registry to
incorporate faith-based themes.
Rather than writing off religious families as culturally or socially
conservative, Ryan said, "We have to understand that all of these
families share some common fear and concerns and challenges."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1SFaBes Suicide Prevention Resource Center,
online March 3, 2016.
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