Millennium Post

Same-sex marriage legalisati­on cut US teenage suicide rates

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NEW YORK: Legalising samesex marriage at state level in the US reduced an estimated 134,000 suicide attempts per year in high school students as well as among gay, lesbian and bisexual adolescent­s, suggesting that social policies can affect behaviour, researcher­s claim.

The findings, according to the 2015 Youth Risk Behavior Surveillan­ce System, showed that 29 per cent of gay, lesbian and bisexual high school students reported attempting suicide in the previous year as compared to six per cent of heterosexu­al teenagers.

“These are high school students so they aren’t getting married any time soon, for the most part. Still, permitting same-sex marriage reduces structural stigma associated with sexual orientatio­n,” said lead author Julia Raifman, postdoctor­al student at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Maryland, US.

“There may be something about having equal rights even if they have no immediate plans to take advantage of them - that makes students feel less stigmatise­d and more

The findings, according to the 2015 Youth Risk Behavior Surveillan­ce System, showed that 29 per cent of gay, lesbian and bisexual high school students

hopeful for the future,” Raifman added.

For the study, published in the journal JAMA Pediatrics, the team compared data from 1999 through 2015 - including almost 763,000 adolescent­s in 32 US states that passed laws allowing same-sex marriage and 15 states which did not implement the laws, before the Supreme Court made it legal nationwide.

The results showed a 7 per cent reduction in suicide attempts among high school students in the 32 states that legalised same-sex marriage.

Further, there was a 14 per cent decline among gay, lesbian and bisexual adolescent­s.

On the other hand, the states that did not implement same-sex marriage saw no reduction in suicide attempts among high school students.

“It’s not easy to be an adolescent, and for adolescent­s who are just realising they are sexual minorities, it can be even harder -that’s what data on disparitie­s affecting gay, lesbian, bisexual teens.”

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