News
Cyberbullying, Unmet Medical Needs Contribute to Depressive Symptoms Among Sexual Minority Youth
NIH study finds higher rates of dissatisfaction with family relationships
Cyberbullying, dissatisfaction with family relationships, and unmet medical needs are major contributors to the high rates of depressive symptoms seen among adolescents who are gay, lesbian, bisexual, or questioning their sexual orientation, according to researchers at the National Institutes of Health. Their new study on sexual minority youth now appears in Pediatrics.
Researchers used data from the NEXT Generation Health Study, a study from 2009–2016 of 2,785 high school students in 22 states, to assess teens' depressive symptoms beginning at age 17 and continuing for three years after they left high school. They found that almost 30% of sexual minority teens thought they did not have adequate medical care for a 12-month period prior to the study, compared to 19% for heterosexual teens. Teens questioning their sexual orientation or attracted to the same sex or both sexes may fear that providers would disclose information to parents or may be embarrassed to seek mental health services, the authors wrote.
About 32% of the sexual minority youth surveyed reported being victims of cyberbullying—double the number of reported victims among heterosexual peers. Nearly 40% of the sexual minority students surveyed reported "low satisfaction" with family relationships—again double the rate of their heterosexual peers.
"The study shows that adolescence is a critical window for interventions to address depressive symptoms experienced by sexual minority youth," says Jeremy Luk, PhD, first author of the study and postdoctoral researcher at NIH's Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. "Without appropriate screening and intervention, these disparities may likely persist into young adulthood."
Pediatricians and health care providers are well-positioned to address the psychosocial and medical needs of sexual minority adolescents, the authors wrote.
Source: National Institutes of Health
|