About 62 percent of middle schools and high schools had a
counselor’s office, designated classroom or student organization
where LGBTQ youth could get support from administrators, teachers or
other school staff in 2014, up from 51 percent in 2010, the study
found.
And just over 90 percent of schools had anti-harassment policies by
2014, up from 88 percent in 2010.
“For LGBTQ students to thrive in their schools and communities, they
need to feel socially, emotionally and physically safe and
supported,” said lead study author Zewditu Demissie, a researcher in
the Division of Adolescent and School Health at the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.
“Evidence suggests that school-based practices, such as
identification of ‘safe spaces’ have the potential to prevent
victimization and related health consequences among LGBTQ youth,”
Demissie said by email.
Compared to their heterosexual peers, LGBTQ youth are more likely to
have poor diet and exercise habits, abuse drugs and alcohol,
experience bullying and dating violence, engage in risky sexual
behaviors and attempt suicide, researchers note in the American
Journal of Public Health.
LGBTQ teens often do better in school and have a lower risk of
substance abuse or suicide when school policies offer them lots of
support with anti-harassment policies, safe spaces and student
groups like gay-straight alliances, the study authors write.
To examine trends in school policies that support LGBTQ ‘tweens and
teens, researchers looked at data from questionnaires completed by
principals and teachers nationwide in 2008, 2010, 2012 and 2014.
In addition to safe spaces and anti-harassment policies, researchers
also looked at whether schools offered professional development to
help teachers and staff understand the needs of LGBTQ youth; helped
these students access health providers experienced in treating LGBTQ
youth; offered social or psychological services at school or
referred students to outside providers; and provided health
education relevant to LGBTQ youth.
On most of these other measures, schools came up short.
By the end of the study, less than half of schools offered social or
psychological services on campus or referred students to outside
providers, for example.
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At that point, only about 29 percent of schools had a gay-straight
alliance, and just 24 percent provided sexual education materials
that were relevant to LGBTQ youth.
One limitation of the study is that researchers lacked data to
examine middle schools and high schools separately, and it’s
possible that older students might have received different levels of
support than younger students. Another drawback is that some states
without enough data were excluded from the analysis.
It’s also unclear how often or how stringently policies protecting
LGBTQ youth are enforced, said Kimberly McManama O’Brien, a
researcher at Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School
who wasn’t involved in the study.
“I worry that some schools may feel that by making a statement
barring harassment their job is done,” McManama O’Brien said by
email. “But without the training of teachers and staff or offering
access to healthcare providers or other types of supports, this
prohibition alone may not be enough.”
Parents can advocate for schools to implement these policies, and
they can also discuss with their kids things that might come up in
school related to their sexual orientation or gender identity to
help children get support outside school when they need it, said
Hongying Dai, a researcher at Children’s Mercy Hospital and the
University of Missouri-Kansas City.
“LGBTQ youths have disproportionately higher risk in physical and
mental health than their straight peers,” Dai, who wasn’t involved
in the study, said by email. “A school environment that provides
more support for LGBTQ youths could potentially reduce the stress
due to social stigma, discrimination and marginalization.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2D93qbb American Journal of Public Health,
online March 7, 2018.
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