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Protective factors among transgender and gender variant youth: A systematic review by socioecological level

Protective factors among transgender and gender variant youth: A systematic review by socioecological level
Protective factors among transgender and gender variant youth: A systematic review by socioecological level
Transgender and gender variant (GV) youth experience elevated risk for poor health and academic outcomes due mainly to social experiences of stigma and discrimination. To supplement the growing evidence on health risks encountered by transgender/GV youth, we identified factors theorized to be protective for these youth across all four levels of Bronfenbrenner’s socioecological model (individual, relationship, community, societal). We conducted a systematic search of peer-reviewed research. The articles included in this review were published in peer-reviewed journals in English or Spanish between 1999 and 2014, analyzed data from a sample or subsample of transgender or GV participants with a mean age between 10 and 24 years, and examined the relationship of at least one theorized protective factor to a health or behavioral outcome. Twenty-one articles met inclusion criteria. Transgender/GV youth in included articles ranged from 11 to 26 years of age, were racially/ethnically diverse, and represented varied gender identities. Within these articles, 27 unique protective factors across four levels of the ecological model were identified as related to positive health and well-being. Self-esteem at the individual level, healthy relationships with parents and peers at the relationship-level, and gay-straight alliances at the community level emerged as protective factors across multiple studies. Our findings underscore the relative lack of research on transgender/GV youth and protective factors. Novel recruitment strategies for transgender/GV youth and better measurement of transgender identities are needed to confirm these protective relationships and identify others. Growth in these areas will contribute to building a body of evidence to inform interventions.
0278-095X
263-301
Johns, Michelle Marie
388c7dfb-c352-485d-8e9c-78a9dd3ff974
Beltran, Oscar
9d0e1a91-93ef-4855-84bd-5bdf94e2d8b0
Armstrong, Heather L.
3dc9c223-1a61-47ad-ab0b-50d06cddf4f2
Jayne, Paula E.
3e043795-7a7e-41a5-8142-45117a71bd1c
Barrios, Lisa C.
8805b05b-f923-488c-a956-2c4447c4d30a
Johns, Michelle Marie
388c7dfb-c352-485d-8e9c-78a9dd3ff974
Beltran, Oscar
9d0e1a91-93ef-4855-84bd-5bdf94e2d8b0
Armstrong, Heather L.
3dc9c223-1a61-47ad-ab0b-50d06cddf4f2
Jayne, Paula E.
3e043795-7a7e-41a5-8142-45117a71bd1c
Barrios, Lisa C.
8805b05b-f923-488c-a956-2c4447c4d30a

Johns, Michelle Marie, Beltran, Oscar, Armstrong, Heather L., Jayne, Paula E. and Barrios, Lisa C. (2018) Protective factors among transgender and gender variant youth: A systematic review by socioecological level. The Journal of Primary Prevention, 39 (3), 263-301. (doi:10.1007/s10935-018-0508-9).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Transgender and gender variant (GV) youth experience elevated risk for poor health and academic outcomes due mainly to social experiences of stigma and discrimination. To supplement the growing evidence on health risks encountered by transgender/GV youth, we identified factors theorized to be protective for these youth across all four levels of Bronfenbrenner’s socioecological model (individual, relationship, community, societal). We conducted a systematic search of peer-reviewed research. The articles included in this review were published in peer-reviewed journals in English or Spanish between 1999 and 2014, analyzed data from a sample or subsample of transgender or GV participants with a mean age between 10 and 24 years, and examined the relationship of at least one theorized protective factor to a health or behavioral outcome. Twenty-one articles met inclusion criteria. Transgender/GV youth in included articles ranged from 11 to 26 years of age, were racially/ethnically diverse, and represented varied gender identities. Within these articles, 27 unique protective factors across four levels of the ecological model were identified as related to positive health and well-being. Self-esteem at the individual level, healthy relationships with parents and peers at the relationship-level, and gay-straight alliances at the community level emerged as protective factors across multiple studies. Our findings underscore the relative lack of research on transgender/GV youth and protective factors. Novel recruitment strategies for transgender/GV youth and better measurement of transgender identities are needed to confirm these protective relationships and identify others. Growth in these areas will contribute to building a body of evidence to inform interventions.

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Published date: 1 June 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 430034
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/430034
ISSN: 0278-095X
PURE UUID: 2ba6ee05-5a3f-48ea-863e-4e4354ed8118
ORCID for Heather L. Armstrong: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1071-8644

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Date deposited: 10 Apr 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:40

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Contributors

Author: Michelle Marie Johns
Author: Oscar Beltran
Author: Paula E. Jayne
Author: Lisa C. Barrios

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