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LGBT Bullying In School Linked To Long-Term Health Effects In New Report

Bullying

First Posted: 05/16/11 01:30 AM ET Updated: 07/15/11 06:12 AM ET

“That’s so gay.”

Phrases such as this one, used dismissively by teenagers in what is often a casual, offhand way, can impair the health of LGBT youth long after classes end, a new study shows. The term is so pervasive, in fact, that an earlier survey found that 90% of American youth have heard “gay” used in a negative way.

A new report by the Family Acceptance Project at San Francisco State University traced the effects of LGBT-victimizing bullying in school -- including unintentional epithets like “that’s so gay,” more direct verbal harassment, and physical violence -- beyond their initial sting in school hallways. Using data from the project's survey of 245 LGBT young adults, the paper links such bullying to long-term health and developmental problems.

It found that LGBT-targeted bullying related to gender expression or sexual orientation during school years led to increased young adult depression, suicidal thoughts, social adjustment issues and risky sexual behavior. LGBT young adults that reported high levels of anti-LGBT victimization as teens were 5.6 times more likely to report suicide attempts than those victimized less frequently. They were more than twice as likely to report being clinically depressed, and they were more than twice as likely to report having been diagnosed with a sexually transmitted disease by young adulthood.

The report also found that young adult GBT males are targeted more frequently than their female counterparts, and that the amount of bullying a boy receives in school can help predict the health issues he will face later in life.

The report, titled “Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Adolescent School Victimization: Implications for Young Adult Health and Adjustment” and published in the Journal of School Health, comes as both popular culture and policy hone in on the topic. The plot of last week's episode of the ever-popular Fox hit show Glee, for example, revolved around quiet, biting homophobic bullying: an openly gay male was (spoiler alert!) crowned Prom Queen.

“I don’t know if these issues are getting easier to talk about, but a lot of people are willing to have the conversation,” said Jeff Krehely, director of the LGBT Research & Communications Project at the Center for American Progress. “That has to do with the fact that a lot more people are out as L, G, B, or T than they were 10 or 15 years ago.”

Meanwhile, several related bills are currently pending in Congress. The Safe Schools Improvement Act would prohibit LGBT discrimination in public schools and forbid schools themselves from discriminating against students based on gender identity. The Student Non-Discrimination Act would seek to end LGBT bullying with a focus on online behavior. And just last week, Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) introduced legislation aimed at curbing LGBT homelessness.

“When those policies are on the books, they’ll be a deterrent for people who might want to bully LGBT kids,” Krehely said. “They also give kids who are bullied a way to fight back and stand up for themselves.”

Advocates hope that these concrete numbers that show that the pain of LGBT victimization extends beyond students’ school years will give policy initiatives more bite. “Being able to have data that does that is really powerful in the advocacy that I do,” Krehely said.

Prior research on LGBT youth has focused on the effects of bullying during adolescence, finding that it might compromise mental health while victims are still in school. This paper is the first to take a long-term approach.

"While the focus for so long has been on youth bullying, there’s a price to be paid in later life," said Caitlin Ryan, Director of the Family Acceptance Project and co-author of the report. "The negative or adverse effects that happen in earlier stages affect the later stages of their lives."

For Ryan, the report is the culmination of ten years of research. “It shows that there’s a whole social context to LGBT victimization,” she said. “Effects may be happening in the present, but it also affects LGBT young people in the future.”

The effects of LGBT-targeted bullying, she said, are more serious and lasting than people think. “It’s not about special rights,” she said. “It’s tied to the human right of having an education and going into an educational environment that supports them.”

In other words, evidence of the long-ranging effects of bullying makes policy initiatives more important. “This paper provides another important tool in our approach to help our communities and families understand that these are important issues that need to be addressed,” Ryan said. “Schools sometimes minimize victimization related to young people, saying boys will be boys. But it’s more than that.”

She added that her group is seeking funding to develop materials that would teach parents how to cope with and prevent school victimization.

Correction: An earlier version of this article misspelled Jeff Krehely's last name.

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“That’s so gay.” Phrases such as this one, used dismissively by teenagers in what is often a casual, offhand way, can impair the health of LGBT youth long after classes end, a new study shows...
“That’s so gay.” Phrases such as this one, used dismissively by teenagers in what is often a casual, offhand way, can impair the health of LGBT youth long after classes end, a new study shows...
 
 
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
Cacey 07:27 AM on 05/16/2011
It is a key parental responsibility to teach children from an early age that diversity in our society and having self-pride are attributes from which both our society and their children can benefit.  Our children are not clones of ourselves, but individuals growing up in a world different than that which we were raised.  And while there are some common values of decency that transcend generations,  Read More...
06:17 PM on 05/30/2011
As a transsexual woman I think this article highlights many of the ways LGB and transgender identified people bully transsexuals and help to perpetrate myths against them for their own personal and political gain. The first issue I take offense with the article is the way it misgenders those who it identifies as MTF "Transgender." Take this statement The report also found that young adult GBT males are targeted more frequently than their female counterparts, Those who are T do not identify as male and that distinction should have been accounted for. Secondly many that are forced into the transgender umbrella do not wish to be there or are simply dumped there for being noticeably gay that in itself is discrimination. The word Transgender given its history and by its very use is a perverse form of discrimination that the LGBT, politicians, academics, and medical organizations like WPATH that push its use should be held accountable for. I was born with a medical condition that in no way shape or form should come with an automatic assumption that I'll either willingly or by force be associated with either the gay community or the politics and queer theory associated with it. Please quit promoting the idea that all transsexuals are transgender or that they are part of the gay community or that the gay community is even the best choice to speak for us.
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flyby777
Tea parties are for little girls, not government
01:19 AM on 05/29/2011
There is a reason that this bullying continues to occur. It's what they learn at home. Homophobia is passed from generation to generation and until adults can curb their extreme prejudice, the bullying will continue.
11:34 PM on 05/28/2011
really, this bullying needs to be addressed by the old fashioned technique of corporal punishment. There is a reason you don't see this crap in Singapore. A bully gets out of line and they will be caned. This is where conservatives are correct. Regulated caning has to return to discipline those who cannot be handled with kid gloves. Not all kids respond to kind words or pop psychology. That's just a fact.
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hopingheart
He's NOT your Jesus...
12:55 PM on 05/22/2011
New research indicates that kids that are bullied are often themselves bullied and abused in their homes. What a sad world we have created! We have great ability and potential to correct these societal ills. This online community can be of immense power.
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Stacey Jones
You can’t break away what you cannot change
03:38 PM on 05/21/2011
I was bullied, teased, the butt of jokes, called names etc. at school, at home, at technical theatre rehearsals, in public places. I know the effects of bullying and such. I live with it everyday. Everyday for the past seven years. It really effects certain people and they don't become "stronger", and they don't "grow a backbone". I know I live with low-self esteem and suicidal thoughts.

However I need to say that I'm apart of the problem. Honestly I wish I could have stood up for myself more and done so for my classmates, friends, and anyone who was getting bullied or pushed around.

There were times when I was the bully or the teaser. I can remember times when I pushed others around because people were doing it to me. I can remember being mean because the world is mean to me. I just want someone else to feel my pain. I don't want to be weak or spineless. Can I for once be in power?

I think about myself right here right now while I'm writing this and I'm disappointed in myself for not being a better person. I don't treat others right and I don't treat myself right either. Nobodies perfect. But I know I could do so much better.

I need become apart of the solution. It takes honestly, and courage. I've got to do the right thing even if no one's looking and respect myself and others.
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AnotherTry
Tell me again why we can't be equal?
07:17 AM on 05/19/2011
Actually shining a spotlight on the bullying of kids for being or acting LGBT is a brilliant strategy. It has forced the conservatives to defend the bullying of kids when it comes to being or acting or looking gay. Now they are actually trying to stop anti-bullying programs. I guess they haven't realized yet how utterly contemptuous it makes their side look. Most thoughtful people will turn away from this kind of ideology in disgust, It's about time.
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Ossit
Ossit
07:21 PM on 05/18/2011
It's the parents' responsibility, NOT the school to teach their kids how to be nice to each other.And it's the parents' responsibility to defend their kids and do anything they can no matter how long it takes instead of accepting it. Sue for assault, sue for harrassment and don't take no for an answer. Sadly that takes too much work.
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cable1977
Against logic there is no armor like ignorance
08:27 PM on 05/18/2011
It is a school's responsibility to ensure a safe environment where kids all receive equal opportunity to learn free from violence and harassment.
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tomteboda
08:55 PM on 05/18/2011
Agreed, 100% ... and its parents' responsibility to support that goal, because it benefits their children. All of them.
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bgofca
06:15 PM on 05/19/2011
but what if the parent of the kid who is bullying your kid doesn't teach them not to bully??
your idea is not logical.
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Ossit
Ossit
07:14 PM on 05/18/2011
There are two types of bullies. Those who do it and those who watch and do nothing.
06:48 PM on 05/18/2011
In every one of these articles I have read, be it on line, in different newspapers (yes they still exist) this 'problem' is always considered something that only happens to the LGBT community. While, yes I feel sorry for them, what about bullies who DO NOT DISCRIMINATE based on sexual orientation? As a str8 boy growing up in New England after Father got a great deal on aluminum siding for the house--because it was PINK--the years of torture and abuse that followed were unimaginable. Then OR Now. When I grew up, Guidance Counselors and the like blamed the student for not 'fitting in' or suggested 'coming out of your shell'. There was no one who would ever really listen. My question is this: do str8 children who are bullied deserve any LESS sympathy? Wherever I look, all around me the answer is clear: Only Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender children deserve protection. And I think it's damned unfair.
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AnotherTry
Tell me again why we can't be equal?
04:26 AM on 05/19/2011
You started out lying. NO ONE is suggesting that bullying ONLY happens to LGBTs. The point is, anti-gay rights groups want schools to IGNORE the bullying done in the name of hetero-supremacy, even when it's done to straight kids. Enough with this faux outrage over something NO ONE is suggesting.
06:39 AM on 05/19/2011
Alright AnotherTry... SHOW ME an example of any piece on bullying you've seen that isn't somehow tied to the LGBT community. Just ONE. Even Obama's speech on bullying was all about the suffering of the LGBT children.
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AnotherTry
Tell me again why we can't be equal?
07:19 AM on 05/19/2011
Or you can show me an example of any piece that says ONLY LGBT kids are bullied or one that says ONLY the bullying of LGBT kids should be addressed. It's your straw man, now defend it or take it back and apologize.
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AnotherTry
Tell me again why we can't be equal?
07:24 AM on 05/19/2011
What I find ironic is that your own personal story of bullying is related to the issue of LGBTs. why else would you have been teased for having a 'pink' house. Take the blinders off and quit parroting the conservative talking points and think for yourself.
07:40 AM on 05/19/2011
My word, such hostility! I think I've had just about enough of you and your name calling. It is always the practice of those who don't know what they are doing to turn everything around and say "oh yeah? No, YOU PROVE IT," That way you make it MY job to do all the work. If I did a half an hour of cutting and pasting my case would ber PROVED. All you have to do is cut and paste ONE article. But do you actually READ anything longer than the average on-line baloney? Your tactics come down to a simple "I KNOW YOU ARE, BUT WHAT AM I?" Just a bit childish don't you think? Now I'm being demanded to apologize in what must the worst typed comment I have ever seen. And you think because my house was turned pink suddenly makes it an LGBT issue? What is WRONG with you? Perhaps AnotherTry should give it ANOTHER TRY.. or more importantly, how about a REST. "Take the blinders off..." How about taking your own lousy advice. I am always stunned when I run into true HATRED. Think I'd be used to it by now, but under the cloak of anonymity, people become deranged. Have you no shame? Now leave me alone and go make a tirade with someone else LESS sophisticated who might be swayed by such immature ideals.
jpoze
Constitution.
06:41 PM on 05/18/2011
I'll say its a health risk.One of these days the person getting bullied is going to get enough of it and beat the crap out of this so called bully. All you have to do is call a bully's bluff.
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bgofca
06:19 PM on 05/19/2011
that sometimes works in the movies, but in the real world, most of the bullied kids couldn't beat up the bullier. besides, why should the bullied have to act equally aggressive in order to be treated decently?
jpoze
Constitution.
08:34 PM on 05/19/2011
As a whole your right. I just remember these 2 different bullies I had to put up with for a pretty good while until I took all I could stand and fought back. They both backed down and stopped bothering me. You certainly are right about the idea, you should not have to act equally agrassive to be treated decently.
05:48 PM on 05/18/2011
The correct thing to do is throw Obama out; because he and his staff bully everyone.
JIll26
snarky, independent boomer
06:26 PM on 05/18/2011
get a life
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Chuck Pope
05:38 PM on 05/18/2011
So called bullying is a part of life we all must learn to deal with. No one likes to be picked on for sure, but you can't make words illegal to use because that in itself is a violation of ones freedom of speech. Kids learn to deal with bully's eventually and everyone at one time or another has been on the receiving end of it. This along with other negative things in our lives is what helps us grow stronger and helps to shape our character. While I'm not encouraging bullying by any stretch of the imagination, the fact that we have all had it done to us makes us more compassionate to those being victimized which in turn makes us grow out of that stage as we grow older. In this situation they are calling a kid "gay", but what about the boys that are called " girls" or "fatty", they all hurt the same when your being called a name but my point is you can't make them all illegal to say or we won't have any words left to use in fear we may offend someone. In a perfect world everyone gets along and nobody gets there feelings hurt, but we all know the world can never be that way even if we want it to.
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cable1977
Against logic there is no armor like ignorance
06:04 PM on 05/18/2011
"While I'm not encouragin­g bullying by any stretch of the imaginatio­n, the fact that we have all had it done to us makes us more compassion­ate to those being victimized which in turn makes us grow out of that stage as we grow older. "

You are encouraging an apthetic attitude towards bullying. That amounts to an acceptance of the behavior. Should the leaders of the civil rights movement have engaged in the same idea regarding segreation and said, "Well, we all had to ride in the back of the bus, so why try to stop that now"?

I don't need to have been bullied to be able to empathize with and feel compassion for someone who is currently being bullied. That is the whole point of empathy in the first place, to be able to put yourself in someone else's shoes without actually having the same exact experience yourself.

Although one will never eliminate bullying completely one can certainly reduce it in a controlled environment like a school. A child should have the equal right to an education free from harassment. Similarly, as an adult, I have the ability to invoke the law in order to prevent certain amounts of harassment through the use of something like a restraining order.
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Camille Mauro
06:50 PM on 05/18/2011
No one should have to deal with bullying. What world do you live in? So are you saying people deserved to get bullied???? It's not freedom of speech when you cut someone down personally. That's harrassment of the worst kind. You don't have a right to call your co-workers names because you feel it's your first amendment right. It isn't being PC. It's common sense.
04:39 PM on 05/18/2011
I've got news for you people, if you can't learn how to stand up to a bully, you ARE going to end up with long term effects, most cowards do.
05:23 PM on 05/18/2011
I have news for you. The current times do not allow for punching a guy in the face. There is a camera everywhere you look, and unless you want slam-dunk prosecution against yourself you punching the bully out isn't an option. You entry is only blaming the victim anyway. Bullies are identified as narcassitic psycopathic personallity disorders. In otherwords they are people to take pleasure in the discomfort(physical or not) and anxiety of others. This bullying is unacceptable, caustic, and destructive. This article is mostly about bullying kids who are gay or must have gender confusion issues. But who ever is being bullyed, it is only because they are different. If a kid has freckles he may get bullyed. It isn't his fault. So incouraging him to fight does nothing to little to solve this problem, and calling them names just makes you another bully.
05:49 PM on 05/18/2011
I would bet big money that Obama was bullied all his life.
04:04 PM on 05/18/2011
Bullying is very destructive to an adolescents ability to function successfully in the school environment. My son is not bullyied due to his sexual orientation, but about his weight. Already extremely shy, his weight has created an avenue for even the most casual of bullies to focus on. He has become increasingly withdrawn from his social group. And his previously stellar academic success has suffered. Last summer, his two best friends, conspired and attempted to molest his 8 year old sister during his birthday sleep over. Suddenly, his social support of two friends he had been close to since kindergarten was gone leaving him without anyone who saw the creative, witty side of his personality...and 50 lbs overweight, he enters 7th grade, to rumors and whispers and no special friend to talk to . He is made fun of daily.The school, Hand Middle School in Columbia, SC is supportive and they have tried to assist him but as anyone with kids knows...much goes on that you never catch, even if you are looking for it...muliply that by an entire middle school and I certainly understand their difficulties. He also must attend school with his former best friend, one of the boys who was involved in the molestation attempt and who shows absolutely no remorse or shame over his role in the act.It has been a white knuckle ride through this school year with suicide fears in every shadow.
isisreptiles
I make no apologies for being who I am.
05:00 PM on 05/18/2011
My heart goes out to your son. My middle school experience was similar. I was bullied because of my appearance and had no friends to support me. I got through it but still have the scars and always will.
07:29 PM on 05/19/2011
I am so sorry. It is a difficult time for most of us, even if we don't have any specific issues. So many changes in both mind and body creates so many challenges. I would not want to repeat the experience. And while I understand that we all have moments where we have behaved in an unkind or unfair manner, I think that encouraging others, and certainly our own children, to be better is the way we should all proceed. Of course I am as guilty as anyone of not always living up to that standard, but I do try. And I do teach all three of my children that kindness and integrity are more substantial than how one looks or how much money one has. I am just so looking forward to school being over for the summer....we can all work together to put this difficult experience behind us and begin renewed in the Fall.
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Camille Mauro
06:56 PM on 05/18/2011
1. The school is obligated to do something about it under the law.
2. Why didn't you bring those kids up on charges? If they didn't do it to your daughter, what makes you think they haven't done it to someone else already that is afraid to come forward?
07:23 PM on 05/19/2011
We actually did report it the morning after it happened but then when they wanted my daughter to go through the pelvic rape exam, even though we knew there had been touching only, we thought we could handle it as a family and through private therapy. I understand it was the wrong decision but at the time...it seemed like it was the right way to go. But as things worsened during the school year...we decided that we all needed to be open about what happened. So charges were made and it is moving through the court system. That has been quite an experience and I am very proud of my children and the bravery and honesty they have shown during the process. But we have discovered some hard truths....the school is very limited as to what they can do, privacy issues come into play. The justice system takes time. With adolescents, the "hand of one" is not the "hand of all" and other children do not have to stop crimes as they are being committed as adults are required to. However, as the boys conspired to molest her for several hours before the incident, the one boy who was watching but didn't touch her is being charged with conspiracy with intent. And the other boy, who is remorseful, has been very clear about what occured and what role the other played.
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ScottandSandra Cannon
I don't discriminate
03:24 PM on 05/18/2011
What about all the kid's being bullied that are NOT in the LGBT community? Proof positive that all you care about is your behavior and nothing about the big picture on bullying. Sad, I am not part of the LBGT community in any way but I would still stand up for the children of those unions no matter what, cover ALL bases for the innocent victims of bullying, too bad you cant get over yourselves and do that too.
isisreptiles
I make no apologies for being who I am.
04:56 PM on 05/18/2011
The majority of anti-bullying effort does seem to be directed towards those who are LGBT. Meanwhile other kids are being bullied for any number of different reasons. Doesn't seem like much effort is being dedicated towards them.
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talkstocoyotes
12:55 AM on 05/22/2011
***What about all the kid's being bullied that are NOT in the LGBT community? ***

What about them? If you're so bothered by the bullying of LGBT kids getting so much attention, no one's stopping you from going out on your own "bullying across the board" campaign.