Violence Victimization, Substance Use Disparities, and Gender-Nonconforming Youth

Exposure to violence victimization may help explain disparities of substance use among gender-nonconforming youth (i.e., those whose gender expression differs from societal expectations). In 2015, three large urban school districts (2 in California and 1 in Florida) conducted a Youth Risk Behavior S...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of preventive medicine 2020-05, Vol.58 (5), p.e159-e169
Hauptverfasser: Lowry, Richard, Johns, Michelle M., Robin, Leah E.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Exposure to violence victimization may help explain disparities of substance use among gender-nonconforming youth (i.e., those whose gender expression differs from societal expectations). In 2015, three large urban school districts (2 in California and 1 in Florida) conducted a Youth Risk Behavior Survey that included the assessment of gender expression among a racially/ethnically diverse population-based sample of 6,082 high school students. Five categories of violence victimization were assessed (felt unsafe at school, threatened or injured with a weapon at school, bullied at school, electronically bullied, and forced sexual intercourse). In 2019, the effect of violence victimization on substance use disparities was examined by calculating sex-stratified prevalence ratios by gender nonconformity, adjusted for sexual identity, race/ethnicity, and grade (adjusted prevalence ratio 1 [APR1]), and comparing these with prevalence ratios adjusted for those variables plus violence victimization (adjusted prevalence ratio 2 [APR2]). Among female students, only being threatened or injured with a weapon was significantly (p
ISSN:0749-3797
1873-2607
DOI:10.1016/j.amepre.2019.12.021