SIECUS Publications

Back to Fact Sheets

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Youth Issues

(Taken from the SIECUS Report, Volume 29, Number 4 - April/May 2001)

During adolescence, young people form their sexual identity. This SIECUS Fact Sheet reviews research on sexual orientation during adolescence and presents the available statistics on lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) students. Many of the studies are regional or local. Much of the research focuses on samples of LGBT youth that are disproportionately at risk.

Sexual Self-Concept, Orientation, and Identity

Sexual Orientation during Adolescence

These statistics are from a report written by the Safe Schools Coalition of Washington that describes several other studies:5

A national survey of 1,752 college students found: 7

Sexual Behaviors

A study of 394 self-identified bisexual and homosexual adolescents in the seventh to twelfth grades who participated in the 1986-87 Minnesota Adolescent Health Survey found: 8

A study of 3,816 public school students 12 to19 years of age who participated in the 1987 Minnesota Adolescent Health Survey found: 9

A study of ninth to twelfth grade public high school students in the 1995 Massachusetts Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance found:10

Contraceptive Use

A study of 3,816 public school students 12 to19 years of age who participated in the 1987 Minnesota Adolescent Health Survey found:11

HIV Risk

Pregnancy

A study of 3,816 public school students 12 to19 years of age who participated in the 1987 Minnesota Adolescent Health Survey found:14

Safety, Harassment, Violence, and Other Social Issues

A national survey of 496 lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and questioning (LGBTQ) students under 19 years of age who were affiliated with local youth service organizations found:15

A study of ninth to twelfth grade public high school students in the 1995 Massachusetts Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance found:16

A study of 3,816 public school students 12 to19 years of age who participated in the 1987 Minnesota Adolescent Health Survey found: 17

A study in the New York juvenile justice system estimates that anywhere from four to 10 percent of the juvenile delinquent population identify as LGBT.18

Sexual Abuse

A study of 394 self-identified bisexual and homosexual adolescents in the seventh to twelfth grade who participated in the 1986-87 Minnesota Adolescent Health Survey found:19

Suicide

A study of ninth- to twelfth-grade public high school students in the 1995 Massachusetts Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance found:20

A Massachusetts Department of Public Health study found:21

Substance Abuse

A study of public high school students in the ninth to twelfth grades in the 1995 Massachusetts Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance found:22

Perceptions of School Personnel

Support for LGBT Youth

Student Attitudes about LGBT Issues

A national survey of 2,804 American high school students 16 to 18 years of age with an “A” or “B” grade average found:30

Parental Support for LGBT Issues

A national survey of 1,000 American parents found:31

Teaching About Sexual Orientation in the Schools

References

  1. Facing Facts: Sexual Health for America’s Adolescents (New York: SIECUS, 1995), p. 12.
  2. Ibid., pp. 10, 12.
  3. Ibid., p. 10.
  4. Ibid., p. 12.
  5. B. Reis and E. Saewyc, Eighty-Three Thousand Youth: Selected Findings of Eight Population-based Studies As They Pertain to Anti-gay Harassment and the Safety and Well-being of Sexual Minority Students (Seattle, WA: Safe Schools Coalition of Washington, 1999).
  6. G. Remafedi, M. Resnick, R. Blum, and L. Harris, "Demography of Sexual Orientation in Adolescents," Pediatrics, vol. 89, no. 4 (April 1992), pp. 714-21.
  7. L. Elliott and C. Brantley, Sex on Campus: The Naked Truth About the Real Sex Lives of College Students (New York: Random House, 1997), pp. 163-4.
  8. E. M. Saewyc, L. H. Bearinger, P. A. Heinz, R. W. Blum, and M. Resnick, “Gender Differences in Health and Risk Behaviors among Bisexual and Homosexual Adolescents,” Journal of Adolescent Health, vol. 23, no. 2, (August 1998), pp. 181-8.
  9. E. M. Saewyc, L. H. Bearinger, R. W. Blum, and M. D. Resnick, “Sexual Intercourse, Abuse and Pregnancy among Adolescent Women: Does Sexual Orientation Make a Difference?,” Family Planning Perspectives, vol. 31, no. 3, (May/June 1999), pp. 127-31.
  10. R. Garofalo, R. Cameron Wolf, S. Kessel, J. Palfrey, and R. H. DuRant, “The Association between Health Risk Behaviors and Sexual Orientation among a School-based Sample of Adolescents,” Pediatrics, vol. 101, no. 5, (May 1998), pp. 895-902.
  11. E. M. Saewyc, L. H. Bearinger, R. W. Blum, and M. D. Resnick, “Sexual Intercourse, Abuse and Pregnancy among Adolescent Women.”
  12. HIV Trends in U.S. Highlight Need for Expanded Prevention, (U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Press Briefing at the Thirteenth International AIDS Conference, Durban, South Africa, July 10, 2000).
  13. Ibid.
  14. E. M. Saewyc, L. H. Bearinger, R. Blum, and M. D. Resnick, “Sexual Intercourse, Abuse and Pregnancy among Adolescent Women.”
  15. 1999 National School Climate Survey (New York: GLSEN, 1999).
  16. R. Garofalo, R. Cameron Wolf, S. Kessel, et al., “The Association between Health Risk Behaviors and Sexual Orientation among a School-based Sample of Adolescents.”
  17. E. M. Saewyc, L. H. Bearinger, R. W. Blum, et al., “Sexual Intercourse, Abuse and Pregnancy among Adolescent Women.”
  18. R. Feinstein, A. Greenblatt, L. Hass, S. Kohn, and, J. Rana, Justice for All? A Report on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Youth in the New York Juvenile Justice System (New York: Lesbian and Gay Project of the Urban Justice Center, 2001). p. 6.
  19. E. M. Saewyc, L. H. Bearinger, P. A. Heinz, et al., “Gender Differences in Health and Risk Behaviors among Bisexual and Homosexual Adolescents.”
  20. R. Garofalo, R. Cameron Wolf, S. Kessel, et al., “The Association between Health Risk Behaviors and Sexual Orientation among a School-based Sample of Adolescents.”
  21. P. Healy, “Suicides in State Top Homicides,” Boston Globe, (Feb. 28, 2001)
  22. R. Garofalo, R. Cameron Wolf, S. Kessel, et al., “The Association between Health Risk Behaviors and Sexual Orientation among a School-based Sample of Adolescents.”
  23. S. K. Telljohann, J. H. Price, M. Poureslami, A. Easton, "Teaching about Sexual Orientation by Secondary Health Teachers," Journal of School Health, vol. 65, no. 1 (Jan. 1995), pp. 18-22.
  24. S. K. Telljohann, et al. (Jan.1995), p. 18; J. H. Price and S. K. Telljohann, "School Counselor’s Perceptions of Adolescent Homosexuals," Journal of School Health, vol. 61, no. 10 (Dec. 1991), pp. 433-8.
  25. S. K. Telljohann, et al, (Jan. 1995), p. 18.
  26. S. K. Telljohann and J. H. Price, "A Qualitative Examination of Adolescent Homosexuals’ Life Experiences: Ramifications for Secondary School Personnel," Journal of Homosexuality, vol. 26, no.1 (1993), pp. 41-56.
  27. W. Marsiglio, "Attitudes toward Homosexual Activity and Gays as Friends: A National Survey of Heterosexual 15- to 19-Year-Old Males," Journal of Sex Research, vol. 30, no. 1 (Feb. 1993), pp. 12-17.
  28. C. Ryan and D. Futterman, "Lesbian and Gay Youth: Care and Counseling," Adolescent Medicine, State of the Art Reviews, vol. 8, no. 2 (June,1997), p. 221.
  29. S. K. Telljohann and J. H. Price (1993), pp. 41-56.
  30. Y2K Who’s Who Among American High School Students (Lake Forest, IL: Educational Communications, Inc., 2000)
  31. Horizons Foundation National Survey of 1000 Parents (San Francisco, CA: Horizons Foundation, 2001)
  32. S. K. Telljohann, et al. (Jan. 1995), p. 20.
  33. Ibid.
  34. Ibid.
  35. D. L. Kerr, D. D. Allensworth, J. A. Gayle, "The ASHA National HIV Education Needs Assessment of Health and Education Professionals," Journal of School Health, vol. 59, no. 7 (Sept. 1989), p. 301-7.
  36. S. K. Telljohann and J. H. Price (1993), pp. 41-56.

page divider

Home | Publications | Support SIECUS | Links | About SIECUS | Site Navigation | Search | Donate
Policy & Advocacy | Media | International | Library | Youth Development | School Health Education Clearinghouse

copyright © 1996-2004, SIECUS
Web Master: siecus@siecus.org

Back to SIECUS home page