Beginning a media release, entitled Bullying, Transgender Students, and the Risk of Suicide, by the National Center for Transgender Equality (NCTE) and The Gay And Lesbian Task Force was the following statement:
New study findings show pervasive bullying of and violence toward transgender and gender non-conforming people, alarmingly high rates of suicide attempts
Ugh.
NCTE has this video on their front page:
More Ugh. The numbers on suicide that NCTE cites in this video are just joyless, and knowing that the grim numbers that were cited reflect the thoughts of real people…well, it’s just heartbreaking.
Below the fold is the full text of the media release Bullying, Transgender Students, and the Risk of Suicide from NCTE and The Task Force.
New study findings show pervasive bullying of and violence toward transgender and gender non-conforming people, alarmingly high rates of suicide attempts“… my suicide attempt had a lot to do with the fact that I felt hopeless and alone in regards to my gender identity.” – Survey respondent
“[I was] harassed in public during high school, rocks thrown at me in the parking lot of high school, harassed in restaurants, drug-seeking behavior, suicide attempt, nothing about my gender identity is a conscious choice – this is the way I came out.” – Survey respondent
WASHINGTON, Oct. 7 – More than half of transgender and gender non-conforming people who were bullied, harassed or assaulted in school because of their gender identity have attempted suicide, according to just-released findings from the National Transgender Discrimination Survey, conducted by the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and National Center for Transgender Equality.
“From our experience working with transgender people, we had prepared ourselves for high rates of suicide attempts, but we didn’t expect anything like this,” says Mara Keisling, executive director of the National Center for Transgender Equality. ”Our study participants reported attempting suicide at a rate more than 25 times the national average.” Forty-one percent of all respondents reported that they had attempted suicide, compared with a national estimated rate of 1.6 percent.
“These shocking and disheartening numbers speak to the urgency of ending bullying in our nation’s schools and ending discrimination in our nation’s workplaces. We know from the recent rash of suicides among young people who have been bullied just how critical it is that we act now and act decisively to save lives,” says Rea Carey, executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force.
Among those who had been bullied, harassed or assaulted while they were in school, half reported having attempted suicide. Most notably, suicide attempt rates rise dramatically when teachers were the reported perpetrators: 59 percent for those harassed or bullied by teachers, 76 percent among those who were physically assaulted by teachers and 69 percent among those who were sexually assaulted by teachers.
Of those who reported that they had to “leave school because the harassment was so bad,” 68 percent said they attempted suicide. Fully 61 percent of respondents who expressed a transgender identity or gender non-conformity while in school reported significant abuses in educational settings. From elementary through graduate school, the survey showed high levels of harassment and bullying (59 percent), physical assault (23 percent), sexual assault (8 percent), and expulsion from school (5 percent), all on the basis of gender identity or expression.
Other findings include:
• Thirty-five percent of the participants who had been bullied, harassed, assaulted or expelled because of their gender identity or expression while in school said that they used drugs or alcohol to cope with the effects of discrimination, compared to 21 percent of those who had not had similar experiences in school.• Twenty-five percent reported that they were currently or formerly homeless, compared to 14 percent of those who did not report mistreatment in schools.
• Those who reported they had to “leave school because the harassment was so bad,” had an HIV infection rate of more than 5 percent, which is more than eight times the HIV infection rate for the general U.S. population.
These suicide statistics are part of broader findings related to health care and health for transgender and gender non-conforming people that will be released next week. Preliminary findings related to employment and economic insecurity, which describes employment discrimination and unemployment rates, were previously released late last year and are available here.
The National Transgender Discrimination Survey is the most extensive survey of transgender discrimination ever done. It includes responses from more than 6,400 people from all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
The National Center for Transgender Equality is a national social justice organization devoted to ending discrimination and violence against transgender people through education and advocacy on national issues of importance to transgender people. By empowering transgender people and our allies to educate and influence policymakers and others, NCTE facilitates a strong and clear voice for transgender equality in our nation’s capital and around the country. The National Center for Transgender Equality is a 501(c)3 organization.The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force builds the political power of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community from the ground up. We do this by training activists, organizing broad-based campaigns to defeat anti-LGBT referenda and advance pro-LGBT legislation, and by building the organizational capacity of our movement. Our Policy Institute, the movement’s premier think tank, provides research and policy analysis to support the struggle for complete equality. As part of a broader social justice movement, we work to create a nation that respects the diversity of human expression and identity and creates opportunity for all.




6 Comments


Now, just how longuntil the Religious Right tries to use these statistics in order to “prove” that being transgender is harmful and should be fought against?
This is absolutely tragic. Where are the news reports about trans kids getting bullied into killing themselves?
Forty-one percent. My god. I think I’m going to be sick.
Confirmation of Earlier NumbersThese confirm earlier studies in Europe that showed attempt rates in K-12 up to 84%.
The numbers that stun people are the suicide attempts that are successful. I point out to people that when LGBT people attempt suicide it is not for the attention. They try to kill themselves because of the attention.
I can just hear Barry, Biden and Gibbstell us all to stop whining about our LGBT kids being driven to kill themselves, or try to. Remember when Reagan branded himself a “compassionate conservative” in order to claim that Democrats weren’t the only ones with empathy? These days, I’d settle for a compassionate Democrat.
The numbers are not completeHow many gay and trans students commit suicide without coming out to anyone. I tried to kill myself when I was 17 because of my gender dysphoria, long before I came out. There is no telling what the REAL percentages are. It’s just heartbreaking.
Z
excellent videoIt felt affirming (not in a very good way, but still!) for the spokespeople to mention the situation of students being bullied by their teachers.
My teacher’s pretext for the assaults was: at that age (eleven) I’d been very emotional, and cried easily. He felt his behavior was justified; after all it was much worse to have a boy who cries, right? (I did finally learn to suppress it, because of my fear of him)
Speaking more honestly (with my parents…and, at a time when I wasn’t around to hear) he admitted my presence made him feel frustrated and inadequate as a teacher. Didn’t help when I found errors in some of the math tests he gave us (which explained why he berated the entire class for having “failed”). If possible, I’d relay that info through a fellow student: not wanting to give him yet another excuse for a confrontation.
I remember that year having spent a lot of time doodling or looking out the window. Until then I’d been fortunate to have had teachers who were less rigid and allowed me to find more constructive ways to stay interested.
First started having symptoms of depression–including suicidal thoughts–at about the same age.
A year prior, I’d made my first real friend at school. Our attachment must have been noticeably romantic; I recall the teachers attempting to keep us apart. Though we weren’t trying to be disruptive…
I get so indecisive when I’m feeling down…maybe that’d explain why I never acted on it. The worst symptoms are kept in check, now. Didn’t seek help until my early 30s, and it took quite a bit longer to discover I get dramatic benefits from Remeron and Wellbutrin (whereas most antidepressants didn’t do much for me).
Had serious problems with anxiety as far back as I can recall. I’m now on disability; while going through that process, I learned I have schizotypal personality disorder. A fairly common problem with those who were bullied or neglected as kids, so I’ve been told.
Among students, only occasionally did the bullies insinuate anything about my sexual orientation. Being very tall and thin, slow to anger, and an eager student: all those things made me an easy target, I’d guess.
At a memorial service for my mother (who passed away in April), her brother told me, “We’ve always known…or, at least since you were five. And we always loved you, no matter what.” Perhaps my gender nonconformity was a bit more self-evident than I’d realized.
Gender non conformingI assuming the study will clarify “gender non conforming” since everyone seems to have a different idea about what that means.