Want to Lower LGBTQ Youth Suicide Risks? Just Accept Who They ArePin

Want to Lower LGBTQ Youth Suicide Risks? Just Accept Who They Are

Since it’s Pride Month, I’ve seen a few references on social media to the higher rates of suicide among LGBTQ youth. I’ve also seen several explanations for it, as well as some suggestions on how to help. Still, I wanted to share this quote from the Inside Mental Health podcast, where the host, Gabe Howard, interviewed Dr. Amy Green from The Trevor Project, because it cuts to the chase with data and facts.

When we look at that, the data is striking. One of our data findings found LGBTQ youth who have at least one accepting adult are 40% less likely to report a suicide attempt. When I say risk factors, rejection is one of the biggest ones on the other side for protective factors, it’s acceptance, its affirmation, its support. It’s so crucial during the adolescence and young adult period.

If you go listen to the whole podcast below, you’ll see that the things that increase the risks for suicide among LGBTQ youth are very much socially based. It’s not that LGBTQ youth have some genetic quirk that makes them more likely to deal with mental health issues; it’s because they are so much more likely to be rejected and unable to live their authentic lives. That one thing is something that has an oversized impact on suicide rates for everyone, and happens to LGBTQ kids more often. (see also –LGBT+ pupils twice as likely to have been bullied than their straight peers, new research finds)

So, here’s something you can do that will have a significant effect on the likelihood that an LGBTQ kid in your life will be lost to suicide: just accept them. Just allow them to be who they are and live their life accordingly. That’s it.

The fact that, somehow, we haven’t figured that out yet, and continue to lose such a large number of LGBTQ kids, should make us nothing but ashamed as a society. If you care about kids, and care about preventing suicide, and aren’t willing to simply accept LGBTQ kids, you’re doing it wrong. The data is clear. They need someone, anyone, in their lives to accept them.

https://psychcentral.com/blog/podcast-lgbtq-youth-suicide-prevention

Similar Posts

  • Bright light treatment

    Thanks to a link from Doug Klippert, I found this article about something called “Bright Light Therapy” which can be used to effectively change the timing of the body clock. “Probably the greatest use of bright light therapy is for the treatment of winter depression, especially in very northern countries which have little sunlight in…

  • Spousal Support

    I was exchanging emails earlier this week with someone around the issue of trying to support a spouse who is a survivor. Obviously, being the survivor in my marriage, I’m not the expert on how to handle this, but I was able to offer some insight into typical male survivor behavior and mindsets that I…

  • Depression for Christians

    Since I have written before about Evangelicals and the seeming belief that no treatment is needed for mental health issues, I thought I should share this article that a friend of mine on Facebook posted. 5 Things Christians Need to Know about Depression and Anxiety I can honestly say, these same things should be taken…

  • How Do We Get Out of the Advocacy Bubble?

    If what I do sounds descriptive of how you live your own online life, than let me challenge you. Find a post that resonates with you, on either blog, and share it with your network. Or, share this post with a personal note about how child abuse, or mental illness, has touched your life with your network. Not just with the folks you already interact with about these topics, but outside of that.

    And then continue to look for ways to reach beyond the bubble of the online survivor community. Because there are survivors and people dealing with mental health problems all around us, and there are also those who remain uneducated about those topics all around us as well.

  • Posing as an Advocate And Harassing Vulnerable People – Yuck!

    I saw this tweet yesterday shared by a few folks, and I was curious to find out what was going on: Yesterday, I found out that someone I followed and supported on social media has been using their platforms in an incredibly inappropriate way. They have posed as a mental health advocate to connect with…

5 Comments

Mentions

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)