"These rates are staggering, and highlight the cost of pervasive anti-gay stigmatization and victimization," said Jay Paul, PhD, a specialist at UCSF's Center for AIDS Prevention Studies (CAPS) and lead author of the study published in the August issue of the American Journal of Public Health. "We cannot take these suicide attempts lightly, as almost half of the men in our study reported multiple attempts. Furthermore, a study such as this can only report suicide attempts; we can never enumerate the lives lost through completed suicides. "
A particularly troubling trend was found in this study. Looking retrospectively at different age groups of gay and bisexual men, there has been a shift whereby initial suicide attempts are happening at a younger age, the researchers found. For most of those men who were at least 25 years old in 1970, the suicide attempt took place after they were 25 years old. For younger men, who did not reach 25 years old until after 1990, most of them made the suicide attempt before they turned 25 years old. This has occurred despite no apparent change in the rate of attempted suicide, which has remained a constant twelve percent.
To understand this better, researchers examined possible predictors of such early attempts. They found that markers of "coming out" or identifying as gay or bisexual were strongly related to earlier suicide attempts, as were reports of repeated anti-gay harassment prior to age 17.
"Gay kids are coming out at an earlier age. While this is generally a positive trend and may be beneficial in the long run, it may also potentially increase the likelihood that these gay-identified kids are subjected to anti-gay victimization," said Paul.
Repeated anti-gay harassment was reported by 28 perce
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Contact: Jeff Sheehy
jsheehy@psg.ucsf.edu
415-597-8165
University of California - San Francisco
5-Aug-2002