Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

NEWSMAKERS

Bias-based bullying amplifies emotional distress in youth with multiple marginalized social positions

The level of emotional distress was as much as 60% lower among adolescents with the same social positions but no bias-based bullying experience. Here, bias-based bullying is an important point for intervention and mitigation of mental health disparities, particularly among LGBTQ+ adolescents.

Photo by Ece AK from Pexels.com

Youth who share similar social positions of race, ethnicity, sexual orientation and gender have much greater levels of emotional distress if they have experienced bias-based bullying — defined as racist, homophobic or transphobic bullying.

This is according to a study from the University of Minnesota Medical School. Titled “Emotional Distress Disparities Across Multiple Intersecting Social Positions: The Role of Bias-Based Bullying”, and written by Marla E. Eisenberg, Samantha E. Lawrence, Hana-May Eadeh, Malavika Suresh, G. Nic Rider, and Amy L. Gower, the study was published in Pediatrics.

“We hear a lot about mental health disparities affecting minority youth, and a common misinterpretation is that ‘those kids’ have problems,” said Eisenberg.

And so the researchers analyzed 2019 Minnesota Student Survey data on more than 80,000 students in grades 9 and 11. They then team used models to identify rates of depression, anxiety, self-injury, suicidal ideation and suicide attempts.

“When kids are harassed or bullied for just being who they are — that’s the problem, that’s where we need to make changes,” said Eisenberg.

The findings suggest bias-based bullying is a contributing factor to emotional distress among youth with multiple marginalized social positions. The researchers, therefore, suggest bias-based bullying is an important point for intervention and mitigation of mental health disparities, particularly among LGBTQ+ adolescents.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Like Us On Facebook

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

NEWSMAKERS

Childhood trauma may leave a biological and psychological imprint that lasts decades. Meaning: childhood sexual abuse may be linked to a significantly higher likelihood...

NEWSMAKERS

About 9 in 10 students experienced at least one instance of peer victimization during the early part of the school year. Children who experienced...

NEWSMAKERS

The mental health burden carried by gender-diverse youth is not an inherent consequence of gender diversity but rather is shaped by the social and...

Health & Wellness

Both identity cohesion and identity-based growth are positively associated with resilience and were negatively associated with depressive symptoms. This suggests that the stronger cohesion...

Advertisement