| Literature DB >> 35805599 |
Paula Daniella de Abreu1, Rubia Laine de Paula Andrade1, Israel Lucas da Silva Maza1, Mariana Gaspar Botelho Funari de Faria1, Jordana de Almeida Nogueira2, Aline Aparecida Monroe1.
Abstract
Mothers, fathers, or guardians of children and adolescents who do not identify with the gender they were assigned at birth face barriers in their social network to recognize their children's gender identity. This study aimed to analyze the scientific evidence on the dynamics of primary social networks to support mothers, fathers, or guardians of transgender children and adolescents. This is a systematic review of qualitative studies guided by the PRISMA guidelines. Controlled and free vocabulary were used to survey the studies in the EMBASE, Scopus, MEDLINE, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), PsycInfo, Latin American and Caribbean Literature in Health Sciences (LILACS), and Web of Science databases. A total of 21 studies composed the final sample. Primary social networks were described as fragile and conflicting family/blood relationship ties with disapproval, isolation, rejection, a lack of understanding, and feelings of exclusion were expressed. Some have lost friends, reported tension in marriage and with relatives, and were commonly treated with hostility and harassment. Social transition does take place in the mutual context of struggle and resistance which demands a support network for parents or guardians.Entities:
Keywords: parents; social networking; social support; transgender persons
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35805599 PMCID: PMC9265819 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19137941
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1Flowchart of studies selected for systematic review on the dynamics of primary social networks to support mothers, fathers, or guardians of transgender children and adolescents. Ribeirao Preto, SP, Brazil, 2022. LILACS—Latin American and Caribbean Literature on Health Sciences; CINAHL—Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature. Source: Adapted from Page et al. [13].
Information and synthesis of the main results of studies selected for systematic review on the dynamics of primary social networks to support mothers, parents, or guardians of transgender children and adolescents. Ribeirao Preto, SP, Brazil, 2022.
| ID | Author(s)/Journal/Year/Country | Objective | Study Sites | Collection | Main Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S1 | Hill; Menvielle/Journal of LGBT Youth/2009/USA | Document problems faced by parents of children with childhood gender variation behaviors and/or gender variation identity and compile their knowledge. |
Wisconsin, Washington District of Columbia and Canada. 43 parents (heterosexual and lesbian couples) of 31 transgender children. |
Semi-structured open-ended interviews through the phone. Analysis: not applicable. | Most parents recognized their children’s gender identity, some ignored it, and the others were not involved in decisions related to social transition. One parent reacted quite negatively to this and created conflicts with his wife. Few fathers reported being happy with their children’s gender identity, however, mothers were more “open”, although one of them reported embarrassment. In some families, the dynamics was training and policing of children’s behavior, sometimes due to the insistence of grandparents. |
| S2 | Riley et al./International Journal of Sexual Health/2011/USA | Provide a foundation to support all children with gender variation and their parents by identifying their needs. |
USA, Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom. 27 mothers; 3 parents and 1 guardian of transgender children; with snowball sampling. |
Interviews via internet with closed-ended and open-ended questions. Content analysis, with the help of Weft qualitative data analysis (QDA), with a continuous reflective-interpretative process to generate the themes. | Most parents reported a sense of exclusion, with some writing in detail about how they lost friends and relatives by affinity. They also reported tension in the marriage or how the family is harassed, ostracized, and/or treated with hostility. Some parents were reported to the authorities by another parent who claimed that a child’s variant gender behavior meant she was being abused at home. |
| S3 | Riley et al./Sex Education/2013/Australia | Investigate and understand the experience of people who have the experience and knowledge necessary to determine the needs of children with gender variations and their parents. |
Sydney (Australia). Parents of children 12 years of age and younger, transgender adults, and clinical professionals with experience working with the transgender community, with snowball sampling. |
Online interview with closed and open questions, by the Zoomerang method. Grounded theory and content/thematic analysis, which involved a reflection on the interpretative process. A coding method was used, following Buckingham and Saunders. | The needs of parents of children with gender variation include information (could be provided in the form of books and stories about children with gender variation and their families; up-to-date research published in the media; and parenting guidelines and strategies); and support from family and friends (an environment of acceptance and care, with respect, compassion, help, and encouragement from family and friends, allows parents to manage the needs of their children). |
| S4 | Kuvalanka et al./Journal of GLBT Family Studies/2014/USA | Understand how parents of transgender children come to identify their children’s expressions of diverse gender, how they feel about their children’s expression and also understand how their social contexts impacted the family’s experiences. |
Miami, Oxford, Ohio, (USA). 5 mothers of transsexual children aged between 8 and 11 years recruited through social networks and contacts of professionals of the study’s advisory board. |
Phone interviews. Open codification (inductive thematic analysis), with three main thematic fields emerging. | Four mothers discussed the reactions of their relatives, such as aunts, uncles, cousins, and grandparents. Most of the time, extended families expressed hesitation or initial resistance, but eventually accepted children’s transitions. One participant noted that connecting with other parents of transgender children provided the kind of support she could not receive from her friends. |
| S5 | Sansfaçon et al./Journal of LGBT Youth/2015/Canada | Understand the problems and challenges experienced by parents of children with gender variation in the process of supporting their children’s gender identity and expression as they grow up. |
Montreal, Canada. 14 parents of children with gender variance. |
Participatory action research using social action methodology (SAM) principles and processes and focus groups. Grounded theory. Data were analyzed as they were collected and involved open, axial, and selective coding. | Parents are constantly pressured by social reactions to their children’s gender identity and sometimes felt as if their private and public lives were in conflict. Some felt uncomfortable discussing it with their neighbors, friends, and family. It was reported: “You risk losing your family, marriage, network”. Family members in some cases showed strong resistance. |
| S6 | Grey et al./Family Process Institute/2016/USA | Describe the experience of parenting of a child with gender variation as well as the mutual influence between the child, the family, and the environment. |
Boston, Massachusetts (USA). 11 caregivers, 8 mothers, and 3 fathers. |
Interviews with semi-structured questionnaire. Participatory action research using social action methodology (SAM) principles and processes and focus groups. | All parents described how having a child with a gender variation impacts the entire family system. The marital relationship between parents oscillated between agreement and tension. Most reported that their partners agreed with them on the shared goals of parents for both “rescue” and “acceptance” of gender expression, although one or the other was further ahead. These approaches impacted the relationship between transgender children’s siblings. Parents who were “deniers” described “mockery” by the siblings, and those who “accepted” reported “acceptance” and defense by the siblings. In the extended family, there was rejection and possible “acceptance” followed by implicit disapprovals. |
| S7 | Pyne/Journal of Progressive Human Services/2016/Canada | Focus a lens on parents of transgender children who affirm their children’s sense of gender, explore how these parents know their children’s gender identities and develop a theory to better understand the knowledge underlying the decision to assert children’s self-identities. |
Canada. 15 parents of gender-non-conforming children and adolescents up to 12 years old. |
Semi-structured interviews. Grounded theory, performed in three coding steps, open, axial, and focused or selective, to incorporate the categories. | Participants reported experiences of conflict with grandparents and other family members as well as judgment by other parents. In some cases, parents witnessed their child(ren) being rejected and harassed by other children. When parents decided to affirm the identity of their children, as all participants eventually did, many were judged along with their children. There were reports of isolation of family and friends after supporting their children’s transition. |
| S8 | Alegría/International Journal of Transgenderism/2018/USA | Understand the experience of parents and caregivers of transgender children/adolescents and their relationships with close family members. |
Six American states (four on the west coast and two on the east). 14 fathers/mothers/guardians. |
Semi-structured interviews. Inductive analysis using a comparative method. Emerging themes were identified. | Relationship of mutual dependence between parents and children. “Need to tell”: assessment of disclosure to their social network. Advocacy between family members and co-workers. Family transition with possible changes of friends. Self-support: knowing their limits. |
| S10 | Carlile/International Journal of Transgenderism/2019/United Kingdom | Investigate the experiences of transgender children and adolescents and their families in their interactions with primary and secondary healthcare providers in England. |
England, the United Kingdom. 65 transgender and non-binary parents and children between 12 and 18 years old and other adults. |
Participant-researcher model, here called “Illuminate”. Analysis with identification of themes and sub-themes, outlined and evidenced in a document. | Dynamics in the nuclear family weakened by the need for actions aimed at parents and siblings’ mental health; importance of family support for recognizing gender identity. Parents’ knowledge of gender identity came from their own experience with their children and experiences related to their profession. One of the participants was a social worker and received support in the workplace, also used her social work skills to perform a reflective “daily work” with her child at home. |
| S11 | Hidalgo; Chen/Journal of Family/2019/USA | Explore how, if at all, parents of prepubescent transgender people experience gender minority stress related to their children’s gender identity/expression. |
USA. 40 parents, 8 participating alone and 16 participating as dyad and their children: 24 children and adolescents aged between 4 and 11 years treated in a gender clinic. |
Focus groups, following a scripted protocol. Content analysis. A multiphase coding process to establish reliability was employed. Dedoose program was used. | Parents reported perceiving discrimination from other parents and unknown community members (lack of support from peers with cisgender children), in addition to being “examined” and “observed”. They also reported rejection perceived or experienced by family members and friends (adults) and other parents, with “silence”, judgments, broken ties with friends and other parents in activities segregated by gender. In addition, there are cases of misgendering (use of intentional or inadvertent incorrect pronouns) and fragile relationships: family-based non-affirmation, lack of support from some family members that may become another obstacle. |
| S9 | Sansfaçon et al./Journal of Family Issues/2019/Canada | Explore the journey of parents of transgender children regarding the acceptance of their children’s gender identity, including the reactions to their children’s transformations, struggles, facilitators of acceptance and experiences in clinical settings. |
Montreal, Quebec; Ottawa, Ontario and Winnipeg, Manitoba. 4 fathers and 32 mothers of 35 children and adolescents from 9 to 17 years old. |
Semi-structured interviews. Inductive and reflective thematic analysis. Transcripts were coded and separated into thematic areas. The data analysis software used was MAXQDA. | The mother often carries the entire emotional, physical, and organizational burden. While the lack of co-parent involvement and support did not appear to prevent the parents we interviewed from giving their children access to gender affirmation and transition-related care, it was said that this delayed the process. |
| S13 | Clark et al./Elsevier Journal of Adolescence/2020/Canada | Exploring the decision of transgender youth and their parents made about the start of hormone therapy. |
British Columbia (Canada) 21 transgender youth aged between 14 and 18 years and 15 parents of these young people Snowball sampling technique was used. |
Semi-structured interviews. Analysis of constructivist grounded theory of transcriptions of interviews and drawings of lifelines, performed within the groups, then between groups, with the help of NVIVO 11 Pro. | The processes of recognition of their children’s gender identity took place after their children’s revelation that they requested parental support for hormone therapy. The majority supported their children’s access to hormone therapy in order to meet their urgent demand. However, parents felt overwhelmed and lacked informational support, and, after meeting their children’s demand, they returned to the discovery phase to try to understand the situation and their role. |
| S14 | Medico et al./Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry/2020/Switzerland | Examines the experiences of transgender and gender-diverse children and youth and their parents/caregivers who have been referred to gender-affirming clinics. |
Switzerland. 10 parents/caregivers and 10 children, one child, eight adolescents and one young individual. Snowball sampling was used. |
Semi-structured interviews. Inductive analysis through reading, line-by-line coding and the help of MAXQDA software, and then organized into themes. | Parents reported being challenged by their external environment, family, friends, neighbors or even co-workers. As a mother said, “I have received many comments”, and her decision to support her child in a process of transition and/or identity affirmation as transgender is criticized. |
| S15 | Testoni; Pinducciu/Sciendo/2020/Italy | Consider how parents of transgender children handled their transition and how they live the experience of grief. |
Italy, Spain and USA. 18 parents (11 cis-females, 6 cis-males, 1 non-binary). Spain (5), Italy (6), and USA (7). |
Individual online interviews, through the SurveyMonkey platform. Thematic analysis, with the help of Atlas.ti. | Parents expressed their social isolation and the difficulty of being understood about their own suffering and experience of loss in their family network and social relationships. Difficulties in social acceptance, family and couple support can prolong and complicate the grief phase of depression and sadness. Parents showed that they felt excluded from social contexts and that communication with family members and networked relationships were often very difficult. Within family relationships, the most painful was with the intimate partner, in the parental couple role. Parents were often confronted with the exclusion of social contexts and, above all, with the rejection of partners or family members. |
| S12 | Bhattacharyaet al./Journal of Family Psychology/2020/USA | Understand the perspectives of transgender youth and their caregivers, young-caregiver relationship and caregiver–caregiver in the family system. |
USA. 20 families (20 transgender youth aged between 7 and 18 years and 34 caregivers). |
Semi-structured interviews Thematic analysis with immersion and crystallization method Dedoose program was used. | Strong bond of dependence with support/conflict between young caregivers. Relationship between conflicting parents and divergent ideas: mother’s recognition and father’s adjustment period. The mother found support in friendships and the father did not disclose it to friends (refers to shame and difficulty). Closeness between couples contributed to support for the young person. With regard to conflict, one caregiver blamed the other. There was conflicting and interrupted ties in the extended family with an episode of transphobia. |
| S16 | Dangaltchevaet al./Frontiers in Psychology/2021/Canada | Describe the adaptation of the Connect program to meet the needs of parents of transgender and gender-non-conforming youth and measure program effectiveness. |
British Columbia, Canada. 20 parents (14 mothers and 6 fathers) of 16 gender-non-conforming youth aged between 12 and 18 years. |
Group dynamics; participation in 9 out of 10 sessions. Model analysis, through notes of recorded sessions, reviewed and assigned themes, using NVivo 11. | Gender identity disclosure by their children generated a “shock” in their parents, others perceived signs previously, but they did not understand. There were reports of parents’ frustration trying to prove to family members that their son was trans. Other parents mentioned ties that were broken with family and friends. They had no friends to talk to about the transition. The relationship between parents and children for the use of names and pronouns was referred to as a challenge, and “not loving the transition” weakened the relationship with their children. |
| S17 | Frigerio et al./Journal of GLBT Family Studies/2021/Italy | Explore the experiences of parents of transgender adolescents diagnosed with gender dysphoria who, for the first time, attended a clinic for psychological consultation. |
Milan (Italy). 15 parents (10 mothers and 5 fathers) of transgender and gender-diverse adolescents, most (93%) transgender boys, aged between 14 and 19 years. |
Individual interviews, via Skype or phone. Inductive thematic analysis through coding, search of themes, and organization of themes. | Some family members and close friends supported parents to prioritize the well-being of their transgender children, other family members were less familiar with transgender children due to geographic distance or work and relational obligations, non-recognition, “acceptance” was frequent. A mother reported a fragile/interrupted bond with her eldest daughter and son-in-law for not recognizing and fearing that her son would be “influenced” by her brother. Some parents disclosed their child’s gender identity so as not to have to be justified, including in the workplace. Others avoided speaking openly to relatives and friends of some and hiding it from co-workers to avoid relational conflicts. |
| S18 | Katz-Wise et al./Journal of Family Issues/2021/USA | Explore attitudes and challenges faced by parents/caregivers of transgender and/or non-binary youth. |
USA. 27 parents/caregivers of transgender and/or non-binary children, adolescents, and young people. |
Interview through online form. Thematic analysis, using immersion/crystallization approaches to identify themes. Primary coding was completed using the Dedoose software platform. | Social interactions within the family: Sub-theme 4 included the disclosure of child gender identity to the father and the family’s level of focus on the child’s gender identity. It also included aspects of support and relationships between parents, children, and extended family. In general, participants expressed support for their children’s gender identity and gender identity revelations. One mother reported disagreement with her child’s other father: “His biological father is not supportive and I am worried...”. Participants who currently received or desired support reported receiving or wanting support including from friends and colleagues. |
| S19 | Lorusso; Albanesi/Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology/2021/Italy | Map/describe the needs of parents of transgender and gender-diverse children in Italy, their relationship with the health and education systems, and how they deal with the challenges of the context in which they live. |
Italy. 13 parents recruited by the snowball technique. Cisgender parents = four fathers and nine mothers, among them: three heteroparentals and one female homoparental. The age of their children ranged from 5–17 years. |
Individual semi-structured interviews via Skype. Reflective thematic content analysis, in which the first themes were generated, these were validated by participants by email for building the final themes. | Parents reported that they had no information on gender variation in children and adolescents prior to the experience with their children. This subject was a taboo in the family. One father mentioned having explained to friends when they asked about his transgender daughter with her registered name, another father reported that co-workers use discriminatory expressions, which led him to mediate a dialogue. Two parents mentioned participating in interviews as a form of self-reflection for their self-support. |
| S20 | Rabain/Frontiers in Sociology/2021/France | For parents: Reflect on family relationships and deal with all types of experiences of discrimination. |
Paris (France). Parents and adolescents in support groups, together between two and twenty families. |
Group interviews with progressive inclusion. Identification of recurring themes arising from group therapeutic approaches for parents and adolescents and for both (multifamily). | The most recurrent issue among participants included hostility from relatives outside the family nucleus and neighbors. Most of the time, this phenomenon of rejection constitutes an impediment to the transition process. With regard to informational support, transgender adolescents temporarily become teachers of their own parents. The latter not only have subjective knowledge, but also information collected on social networks and blogs by transgender adolescents. Collective discourse is based on a lexical field of neologisms that they have to convey to their parents. |
| S21 | Szilagyi; Olezeskib/Smith College Studies in Social Work/2021/USA | Discuss unique challenges encountered in working with parents and caregivers of transgender youth during virtual visits that have the potential to interfere with the development of a therapeutic alliance and the movement towards greater family acceptance. |
Connecticut (USA). Parents/caregivers of transgender adolescents participated. |
Meetings by videoconference of team members with children and guardian together then separately. Description of two clinical cases for interpretation and discussion. | The relationship with close friends and family was judgmental by some if parents supported gender variation and by others if they did not. Friends or family believed that “encouraging” an identity could lead to significant damage to their child. Among their politically progressive friends were several adults who identified as gay, lesbian or queer, some of whom had atypical or non-conforming gender expressions, and all of whom “accepted and affirmed”. Transgender youth families have different stages of understanding and accepting gender identity and gender expression of their young people, an important initial step in family therapy would be to assess levels of opposition and/or support in the family, with the aim of increasing family attunement. |
Methodological quality of articles included in the systematic review on the dynamics of primary social networks in supporting mothers, fathers, or guardians of transgender children and adolescents. Ribeirao Preto, SP, Brazil, 2022.
| 1. Is There Congruence between the Stated Philosophical Perspective and the Research Methodology? | 2. Is There Congruence between the Research Methodology and the Research Question or Objectives? | 3. Is There Congruence between the Research Methodology and the Methods Used to Collect the Data? | 4. Is There Congruence between the Research Methodology and the Representation and Analysis of Data? | 5. Is There Congruence between the Research Methodology and the Interpretation of Results? | 6. Is There a Statement Locating the Researcher Culturally or Theoretically? | 7. Is the Researcher’s Influence on Research and Vice versa Addressed? | 8. Are Participants and Their Voices Adequately Represented? | 9. Is the Research Ethical According to Current Criteria or, for Recent Studies, Is There Evidence of Ethical Approval by an Appropriate Body? | 10. Do the Conclusions Drawn in the Research Report Stem from Data Analysis or Interpretation? | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hill; Menvielle, 2009 [ | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | U | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Riley et al., 2011 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Riley et al., 2013 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Kuvalanka et al., 2014 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Sansfaçon et al., 2015 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Grey et al., 2016 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Pyne, 2016 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Alegría, 2018 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Carlile, 2019 [ | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | U | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Hidalgo; Chen, 2019 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | Y |
| Sansfaçon et al., 2019 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Clark et al., 2020 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Medico et al. 2020 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Testoni; Pinducciu, 2020 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Bhattacharya et al., 2020 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Dangaltcheva et al., 2021 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Frigerio et al., 2021 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Katz-Wise et al., 2021 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Lorusso; Albanesi, 2021 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Rabain, 2021 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| Szilagyi; Olezeskib, 2021 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | U | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Legend: Y—Yes; U—Unclear; N—No.