Social Ecological Correlates of Polyvictimization among a National Sample of Transgender, Genderqueer, and Cisgender Sexual Minority Adolescents

IF 3.4 2区 心理学 Q1 FAMILY STUDIES Child Abuse & Neglect Pub Date : 2017-05-01 DOI:10.1016/j.chiabu.2017.02.017
Paul R. Sterzing , G. Allen Ratliff , Rachel E. Gartner , Briana L. McGeough , Kelly C. Johnson
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引用次数: 115

Abstract

Polyvictimization is a common experience for youth in the United States, with 20% nationally experiencing five or more different forms of victimization in the last year. Utilizing a large, national convenience sample of sexual and gender minority adolescents (N = 1177, 14-19 years old), the current study aimed to (a) generate the first estimates of last year polyvictimization (including nine victimization subtypes) for transgender, genderqueer, and cisgender (i.e., assigned birth sex aligns with gender identity) sexual minority adolescents and (b) identify social ecological correlates of last year polyvictimization. The study utilized an online survey advertised through Facebook and community organizations across the United States. Approximately, 40% of participants experienced ten or more different forms of victimization in the last year and were classified as polyvictims. A significantly higher percentage of transgender female (63.4%), transgender male (48.9%), genderqueer assigned male at birth (71.5%) and genderqueer assigned female at birth (49.5%) were polyvictimized in comparison to cisgender sexual minority males (33.0%). Polyvictimization rates for cisgender sexual minority females (35.1%) were not significantly different from male counterparts (33.0%). Several significant risk factors for polyvictimization were identified: genderqueer identity for participants assigned male at birth and higher-levels of posttraumatic stress, family-level microaggressions, and peer rejection. The manuscript concludes with recommendations for future research including the exploration of factors (e.g., lack of community support, gender-role policing) associated with higher polyvictimization rates for genderqueer adolescents. Additionally, professionals (e.g., foster care, homeless shelters, schools) require new tools to assess for polyvictimization among sexual and gender minority adolescents.

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跨性别、性别酷儿和顺性少数青少年多重受害的社会生态关联
对美国年轻人来说,多重受害是一种常见的经历,去年全国有20%的年轻人经历过五种或更多不同形式的受害。本研究利用全国范围内的性少数和性别少数青少年样本(N = 1177, 14-19岁),旨在(a)对变性人、性别酷儿和顺性人(即出生性别与性别认同一致)的性少数青少年去年的多重受害(包括九种受害亚型)进行首次估计,(b)确定去年多重受害的社会生态相关性。这项研究利用了一项通过Facebook和美国各地社区组织进行的在线调查。大约40%的参与者在去年经历了十种或更多不同形式的受害者,被归类为多重受害者。跨性别女性(63.4%)、跨性别男性(48.9%)、出生时被指定为男性的性别酷儿(71.5%)和出生时被指定为女性的性别酷儿(49.5%)的多重受害者比例明显高于顺性少数性别男性(33.0%)。性少数群体女性的多重受害率(35.1%)与男性的多重受害率(33.0%)无显著差异。多重受害的几个重要风险因素被确定:性别酷儿身份的参与者在出生时被指定为男性和较高水平的创伤后应激,家庭层面的微侵犯和同伴排斥。论文最后提出了对未来研究的建议,包括探索与性别酷儿青少年多重受害率较高相关的因素(例如,缺乏社区支持、性别角色监管)。此外,专业人员(如寄养、无家可归者收容所、学校)需要新的工具来评估性和性别少数群体青少年的多重受害情况。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
10.40%
发文量
397
期刊介绍: Official Publication of the International Society for Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect. Child Abuse & Neglect The International Journal, provides an international, multidisciplinary forum on all aspects of child abuse and neglect, with special emphasis on prevention and treatment; the scope extends further to all those aspects of life which either favor or hinder child development. While contributions will primarily be from the fields of psychology, psychiatry, social work, medicine, nursing, law enforcement, legislature, education, and anthropology, the Journal encourages the concerned lay individual and child-oriented advocate organizations to contribute.
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