| Literature DB >> 29159308 |
Lance S Weinhardt1, Patricia Stevens2, Hui Xie1, Linda M Wesp2, Steven A John1,3, Immaculate Apchemengich1, David Kioko1, Shannon Chavez-Korell4, Katherine M Cochran4, Jennifer M Watjen4, Nickolas H Lambrou4.
Abstract
Purpose: In this study, we explored experiences and feelings of safety in public facilities in relation to psychological well-being among transgender and gender nonconforming (TGNC) youth in the Midwest in the summer of 2016, in the context of ongoing legislative proposals and regulations regarding school and public bathroom use in the United States.Entities:
Keywords: anti-transgender legislation; bathroom use; gender minority youth; gender-expansive; health disparities; transgender
Year: 2017 PMID: 29159308 PMCID: PMC5685206 DOI: 10.1089/trgh.2017.0020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transgend Health ISSN: 2380-193X
Demographics and Descriptive Statistics in the Gender Identity and Health Youth Survey (
| Age (years) | 17.2 (1.8) | |
| Race/ethnicity | ||
| White | 84 (70.6) | |
| Hispanic/Latino | 11 (9.2) | |
| Black | 2 (1.7) | |
| Native American/American Indian | 4 (3.4) | |
| Other | 18 (15.1) | |
| Type of living environment | ||
| Urban | 37 (31.1) | |
| Suburban | 63 (52.9) | |
| Rural area | 10 (8.4) | |
| Other | 9 (7.6) | |
| Assigned sex at birth | ||
| Male | 13 (10.8) | |
| Female | 107 (89.2) | |
| Gender identity 1[ | ||
| Man/boy | 37 (31.1) | |
| Women/girl | 15 (12.6) | |
| Genderqueer/non-binary | 51 (42.9) | |
| Other | 16 (13.4) | |
| Gender identity 2[ | ||
| Agender | 7 (5.9) | |
| Transgender | 34 (28.6) | |
| Gender nonconforming | 6 (5.0) | |
| Genderqueer | 22 (18.5) | |
| Non-binary | 16 (13.4) | |
| Other | 15 (12.6) | |
| Multiple | 19 (16.0) | |
| Sexual orientation | ||
| Lesbian, gay, or homosexual | 23 (19.2) | |
| Straight or heterosexual | 9 (7.5) | |
| Bisexual or pansexual | 57 (47.5) | |
| Questioning | 6 (5.0) | |
| Other or multiple | 22 (18.3) | |
| School access to bathrooms consistent with gender identity[ | ||
| Yes | 37 (30.8) | |
| No | 25 (20.8) | |
| Don't know | 35 (29.2) | |
| Don't go to school currently | 23 (19.2) | |
| Wisconsin legislature[ | ||
| Yes | 74 (63.8) | |
| No | 42 (36.2) | |
| Joint announcement[ | ||
| Yes | 72 (61.5) | |
| No | 45 (38.5) | |
| Negative bathroom experience[ | ||
| Yes | 54 (45.8) | |
| No | 64 (54.2) | |
| Felt unsafe[ | ||
| Yes | 66 (56.4) | |
| No | 51 (43.6) | |
| Bathroom use[ | ||
| Gender identity | 19 (16.2) | |
| Assigned sex at birth | 40 (34.2) | |
| Unisex/family bathrooms | 12 (10.3) | |
| Situational choices | 46 (39.3) | |
| Problematic depression in past year | ||
| Yes | 104 (87.4) | |
| No | 15 (12.6) | |
| Problematic anxiety in past year | ||
| Yes | 113 (95.0) | |
| No | 6 (5.0) | |
| Medical problems in past year | ||
| Yes | 47 (39.8) | |
| No | 71 (60.2) | |
Gender identity 1 denotes self-identified gender identity.
Gender identity 2 denotes self-identified non-cisgender identity.
School access denotes whether school allows them to use the bathroom consistent with their gender identity.
Wisconsin legislature denotes a bill proposal last year trying to limit transgender people's bathroom use to their sexual assigned at birth in Wisconsin.
Joint announcement denotes the U.S. Department of Justice and Department of Education released policies that instruct schools and colleges to treat transgender students according to their gender identity on bathroom and locker room use.
Bathroom experience denotes discriminatory experiences of using bathrooms related to their appearance or gender identity in public.
Felt unsafe denotes whether they have felt unsafe in bathrooms due to their appearance or gender identity in public.
Bathroom use denotes bathrooms they usually use in public.
SD, standard deviation.
Psychological Scales in Gender Identity and Health Youth Survey (
| Scale | Range | Mean | SD |
|---|---|---|---|
| RSES[ | 10–39 | 24.9 | 6.4 |
| LGBT stigma[ | 1–4 | 2.5 | 0.7 |
| Perceived stigma | 1–4 | 2.9 | 0.7 |
| Enacted stigma | 1–4 | 2.1 | 0.8 |
| Resilience[ | 53–169 | 120.3 | 23.1 |
| YQoL[ | 14–100 | 55.0 | 18.3 |
Scores below 25 indicate low-esteem. A score of 25–35 is considered typical self-esteem.[14] In our sample 44.4% of participants had low-self-esteem (overall RSES score <25).
We adapted the sexual stigma scale, which was designed for LGB adult women. The authors provide their original sample means for the total scale as 2.0 (SD=0.45).[17] They also provide means for the Perceived Stigma subscale as 2.67 (SD=0.70) and for the Enacted Stigma subscale as 1.51 (SD=0.40).[17]
Wagnild reviewed three adolescent health studies that used the RS.[21] Among these three studies, the overall mean scores were 146.6 (SD=14.1) in adolescent mothers, 111.9 (SD=17.6) in homeless adolescents, and 132.5 in high-risk adolescents.[21] Possible scores range from 25 to 175. After repeated applications of the RS with a variety of samples, scores greater than 145 indicated moderately high-to-high resilience, 125–145 indicated moderately low to moderate levels of resilience, and scores of 120 and below indicated low resilience.[21]
Patrick et al. used a 6-item version of this scale in a large sample of high-school age LGB youth.[25] They reported scores across different categories of participants (by grade, by gender, and by whether or not they were bullied due to perceived sexual orientation or other factors). QoL scores ranged from 54 to 83 across these different combinations of categories. The observed score here is at the lower end of the range of scores reported in Patrick, consistent with LGB students who had been bullied because of perceived sexual orientation.[25] Scores are comparable between studies because the total scale score on the YQoL is the total of transformed item scores divided by the number of items.
QoL, quality of life; RSES, Rosenberg Self Esteem Scale; YQoL, youth QoL.
Comparison on Psychological Variables and Well-Being Among Transgender and Gender Nonconforming Youth Based on Feeling Unsafe in Bathrooms (
| Variable | Felt safe in bathrooms, mean (SD), or | Felt unsafe in bathrooms, mean (SD), or | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Self-esteem[ | 26.22 (6.71) | 23.98 (6.08) | −1.88 |
| Resilience[ | 125.67 (24.31) | 116.06 (21.86) | −2.25[ |
| QoL[ | 59.09 (20.29) | 51.89 (16.17) | −2.14[ |
| LGBT stigma[ | 2.34 (0.77) | 2.64 (0.63) | 2.23[ |
| Anxiety in past year[ | 46 (90.2) | 65 (98.5) | 4.06[ |
| Depression in past year[ | 43 (84.3) | 59 (89.4) | 0.66 |
| Medical problems[ | 16 (31.4) | 30 (46.2) | 2.61 |
p<0.05.
A composite score.
A dichotomous variable.
Comparison on Psychological Variables and Well-Being Among Transgender and Gender Nonconforming Youth Based on Experiencing Problems in Bathrooms Due to Gender Identity or Expression (
| Variable | Did not experience problems in bathroom, mean (SD), or | Did experience problems in bathroom, mean (SD), or | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Self-esteem[ | 25.19 (6.39) | 24.65 (6.46) | −0.45 |
| Resilience[ | 121.00 (25.02) | 119.44 (21.17) | −0.36 |
| QoL[ | 55.40 (18.74) | 55.02 (18.16) | −0.11 |
| LGBT stigma[ | 2.26 (0.70) | 2.79 (0.62) | 4.26[ |
| Anxiety in past year[ | 59 (92.2) | 53 (98.1) | 2.16 |
| Depression in past year[ | 57 (89.1) | 46 (85.2) | 0.40 |
| Medical problems[ | 21 (32.8) | 25 (47.2) | 2.51 |
p<0.001.
A composite score.
A dichotomous variable.