Some 4.5 percent of U.S. adults identify
as LGBT: study
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[March 06, 2019]
By Daniel Trotta
(Reuters) - An estimated 4.5 percent of
U.S. adults identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender, and they
tend to be younger and poorer than the population at large, according to
an analysis of polling data released on Tuesday.
The Williams Institute at the UCLA School of Law examined previously
released results from the Gallup Daily Tracking survey and went deeper
into the data, enabling a more detailed demographic picture of the adult
U.S. LGBT population of roughly 11.3 million people.
The institute found Washington, D.C., had the highest percentage of LGBT
people at 9.8 percent and North Dakota had the lowest at 2.7 percent.
The self-identifying LGBT population also skews younger. Only 23 percent
are age 50 or older, compared with 47 percent of non-LGBT adults, and 56
percent of LGBT adults are under age 35 compared with 28 percent for the
non-LGBT population.
"Younger people are more likely to actually live as LGBT and to identify
that way because they are growing up in a time when it's more acceptable
to acknowledge those feelings and to act on them," said Kerith Conron,
research director at the Williams Institute.
The LGBT population is also economically disadvantaged: more likely to
lack access to a sufficient nutrition or to have household incomes below
$24,000, the analysis found.
Although LGBT people come from all ethnic groups, people of color
represent a slightly higher percentage than they do in the general
population for reasons that require more research, Conron said.
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A man sells rainbow flags near The Stonewall Inn, on the eve of the
LGBT Pride March, in the Greenwich Village section of New York City,
, U.S. June 24, 2017. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
The Williams Institute, which specializes in LGBT research for law
and public policy, also confirmed its previous estimate of the
transgender population at 0.6 percent, or roughly 1.4 million U.S.
adults.
Conron said an apparent one-percentage-point increase in the LGBT
population from 2011 was likely the result of more people feeling
comfortable responding to questions about their sexual orientation.
In 2011, the Williams Institute estimated the U.S. LGBT population
at 3.5 percent based on other survey data.
Modern polls and surveys estimate the LGBT population well below a
common but unattributed figure of 10 percent that sexologists link
to an oversimplification of Alfred Kinsey's work some 70 years ago.
However, in surveys that are more anonymous and private, closer to
10 percent of respondents say they have some level of same-sex
attraction even if they stop short of identifying themselves as gay,
lesbian or bisexual, Conron said.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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