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High rate of mental health problems in transgender children


 

FROM JAMA NETWORK OPEN

Transgender children, even those as young as 9 or 10 years old, already show increased susceptibility to mental health problems compared with their cisgender peers, new research suggests.

Investigators assessed a sample of more than 7000 children aged 9-10 years in the general population and found those who reported being transgender scored considerably higher on all six subscales of the DSM-5-oriented Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL).

Transgender children had almost sixfold higher odds of suicidality and over twice the odds of depressive and anxiety problems, compared with cisgender children. Moreover, transgender children displayed higher levels of mental health problems compared with previous studies of transgender children recruited from specialist gender clinics.

“Our findings emphasize the vulnerability of transgender children, including those who may not yet have accessed specialist support,” senior author Kenneth C. Pang, MBBS, BMedSc, PhD, associate professor, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, University of Melbourne, Royal Children’s Hospital, Australia, told this news organization.

“Clinicians providing general health care to transgender children should keep this vulnerability in mind and proactively address any mental health problems that exist,” he said.

The findings were published online as a research letter in JAMA Network Open.

Higher levels of support?

“We felt this study was important to conduct because previous studies regarding the mental health of transgender children have been drawn from children receiving specialist gender-related care,” Dr. Pang said.

“Transgender children receiving such care are likely to enjoy higher levels of support than those unable to access such services, and this might create differences in mental health,” he added.

To investigate this issue, the researchers turned to participants (n = 7,169; mean age, 10.3 years) in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study.

“The ABCD study is a longitudinal study of over 11,000 children who were recruited to reflect the sociodemographic variation of the U.S. population,” lead author Douglas H. Russell, MSc, a PhD candidate at the University of Melbourne, told this news organization.

To be included in the current study, children had to understand and respond to the question “Are you transgender?”

The researchers compared mental health outcomes between transgender and cisgender children (n = 58 and n = 7,111, respectively) using the CBCL, which study participants had completed at baseline.

Key protective factor

The transgender children recorded higher mean T scores for all six subscales of the CBCL, although all children scored in the references range; and the standardized mean difference was “small.”

Suicidality was measured by summing the two suicide-related items in the parent-report CBCL assessing suicidal ideation and attempts.

“For the CBCL, T scores are calculated for measures that are scored on a continuous scale,” Dr. Pang noted. “Responses to the suicidality questions on the CBCL were assessed in a categorical manner (at risk of suicide vs. not), as previously described by others. So T scores were therefore not able to be calculated.”

When the investigators determined the proportion of cisgender and transgender children who scored in the “borderline” or “clinical” range (T score, 65), they found increased odds of transgender children scoring in that range in all six subscales, as well as suicidality.

The researchers note the results for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and oppositional defiant problems were not statistically significant.

Previous studies that used clinical samples of young transgender children (aged 5 -11 years) reported lower rates of depression and anxiety than what was found in the current study.

“Transgender children in the general population displayed higher levels of mental health problems compared to previous studies of transgender children recruited from specialist gender clinics,” Mr. Russell said.

One reason for that may be children in specialist clinics “are likely to have support from their families (a key protective factor for the mental health of transgender young people); in comparison, many transgender children in the general population lack parental support for their gender,” the investigators wrote.

“Our findings suggest that by 9 to 10 years of age transgender children already show increased susceptibility to mental health problems compared with their cisgender peers, which has important public health implications,” they added.

The researchers noted that whether this susceptibility “is due to stigma, minority stress, discrimination, or gender dysphoria is unclear, but providing appropriate mental health supports to this vulnerable group is paramount.”

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