September 12, 2019

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Transgender adults who experience discrimination more likely to attempt suicide

A line graph showing that transgender adults who experience a higher number of disrciminatory incidents are more likely to attempt or consider attemping suicide, according to data from the U.S. Transgender Survey. Credit: Williams Institute
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A line graph showing that transgender adults who experience a higher number of disrciminatory incidents are more likely to attempt or consider attemping suicide, according to data from the U.S. Transgender Survey. Credit: Williams Institute

A new UCLA-led analysis of data from the 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey found that more than half of respondents, 51.2 percent, who had experienced four types of anti-transgender discrimination and violence—losing a job, eviction, homelessness and physical attack—in the past year reported attempting suicide in that year. And 97.7 percent of them had seriously thought about suicide.

New analysis of data from the 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey found that over half (51.2 percent) of respondents who had experienced four instances of anti-transgender discrimination and violence in the past year reported attempting suicide in that year. Nearly all (97.7 percent) had seriously thought about suicide.

Respondents who had experienced losing a job, eviction, homelessness, and physical attack in the past year were ten times more likely to have reported in that year compared to those who experienced none of these.

"Experiences of discrimination and serious psychological distress go hand-in-hand, and both are associated with suicide thoughts and attempts among transgender people," said lead author Jody L. Herman, scholar of public policy at the Williams Institute. "Public policies that aim to reduce discrimination against transgender people are suicide prevention efforts."

Previous research has found that transgender people have many of the same risk factors for suicidality as the U.S. general population, such as depression, substance abuse, , and homelessness. However, the current study finds that transgender people also face additional , such as discrimination, family rejection, and lack of access to gender-affirming health care.

Key Findings

"Our analysis suggests that, along with improving access to quality gender-affirming health services, prevention efforts must target the social structures and institutions that stigmatize transgender people and lead to the pervasive and violence they report," said study author Ann P. Haas, Professor Emerita in the Department of Health Sciences, Lehman College of the City University of New York.

The 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey (USTS), conducted by the National Center for Transgender Equality, surveyed 28,000 adults and is currently the largest survey of in the U.S.

More information: The report is available online: williamsinstitute.law.ucla.edu … uicide-Sept-2019.pdf

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