A groundbreaking new Harvard study has found that gay people are far more likely to be tormented as youngsters, often leading to years of post-traumatic stress disorder.
Researchers at Harvard School of Public Health and Children’s Hospital found that gays, bisexuals and heterosexuals who have had a same-sex partner are 1 to two times as likely to experience violence, especially in childhood, and have double the risk of experiencing PTSD as a result.
. . . Using data from a nationally representative sample of more than 34,000 adults, the researchers found that 45 percent of sexual minority women and 28 percent of sexual minority men had experienced violence or abuse in childhood, compared to 21 percent of women and 20 percent of men in the general population.
“I think people know there’s discrimination, but they don’t know the breadth or severity of it - or how lasting the impact is,” Roberts said.
The researchers hope the study, which will be published in the American Journal of Public Health, will raise the awareness of parents, teachers and health-care providers, as well as state lawmakers who are hammering out the final details of an anti-bullying bill in the wake of two high-profile suicides.
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I can hardly believe that anyone would believe that laws to prevent violence against young people are some kind of means to advance the "homosexual agenda". What a crass way of thinking, and typical of the right (read "wrong"!).
ReplyDeleteWhat in the world do they mean . . . "heterosexuals who have had a same-sex partner"?
ReplyDeleteBut if we make people fully aware of how much discrimination/bullying LGBT youth face, and take measures to end it, then we'll be engaging in discrimination against religious people. I mean, it's their right to discriminate against and bully LGBT people in the name of Jesus. Naturally their chosen religious lifestyle takes priority.
ReplyDelete