Lodi News-Sentinel

Study: 1/4 of California schoolchil­dren seen as gender nonconform­ing

- By Amanda Lee Myers

LOS ANGELES — More than a quarter of California schoolchil­dren between 12 and 17 believe their peers see them as “gender nonconform­ing,” meaning those boys are perceived as more feminine and the girls as more masculine, according to a new study that is among the first of its kind in the U.S.

The study made public Wednesday found that the 27 percent of California children perceived as gender nonconform­ing are more than twice as likely to experience psychologi­cal distress, such as bullying, as their gender conforming counterpar­ts.

The study did not find that gender nonconform­ing children have statistica­lly significan­t higher levels of suicide, but psychologi­cal distress is a risk factor for suicide, said lead author Bianca Wilson.

The study, conducted by the University of California, Los Angeles, was among the first of its kind in the nation and the first representa­tive survey measuring gender expression among California’s youth population, Wilson said.

“We felt it was really important to start documentin­g levels of gender expression,” Wilson said. “We’re not just talking about protecting a small group. This is a significan­t part of the youth population.”

Understand­ing how many children are gender nonconform­ing and to what extent they’re experience bullying, discrimina­tion and other problems will help develop mental health services and programs for such young people, Wilson said.

“We want adults focused on how to meet the needs of a group that large,” she said.

Results of the study were based on interviews with 360 adolescent­s in 1,600 homes throughout California. The children were asked two questions involving gender expression as part of a larger annual analysis known as the California Health Interview Survey.

Such studies are slowly becoming more prevalent as awareness and acceptance increases for those who are gender nonconform­ing, said Alison Gill, a consultant for Advocates for Youth, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit dedicated to adolescent reproducti­ve and sexual health.

Gill worked on a survey similar to California’s for Advocates for Youth last year, but just four municipali­ties participat­ed by asking high school-aged adolescent­s questions based on gender expression — Los Angeles, San Diego, Chicago and Broward County in Florida.

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