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OBJECTIVE: To estimate the prevalence of parent-reported sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) discrimination among US children and adolescents and examine associated demographic, health, and adversity-related characteristics. METHODS: We analyzed 2021 to 2023 National Survey of Children's Health (NSCH) data, a cross-sectional, caregiver-reported survey of U.S. children. We compared sociodemographic characteristics, health conditions, adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), co-occurring discrimination, and family context by SOGI discrimination status among children ages 6 to 17. Multivariable logistic regression identified characteristics independently associated with SOGI discrimination. Analyses incorporated survey weights and were stratified by age group. RESULTS: Among 93,982 children ages 6 to 17, 2.2% were reported to have experienced SOGI-based discrimination. Relative to those without reported discrimination, they were more frequently female, older, and less likely to live in 2-parent households. They had significantly higher rates of co-occurring discrimination based on race or health status, bullying, depression, anxiety, ADHD, and learning disabilities, and their caregivers reported greater stress. ACEs-including economic hardship, parental divorce, parental incarceration, and household violence-were significantly more prevalent among those with SOGI-based discrimination. In multivariable regression, co-occurring race- and health-based discrimination, female sex, and older age showed the strongest independent associations; most ACEs and neurodevelopmental conditions did not remain significant after adjustment. Adolescents had higher rates of SOGI-based discrimination (3.5%) compared to children ages 6 to 11 (0.7%). CONCLUSIONS: SOGI-based discrimination is strongly associated with co-occurring adversity and mental health concerns beginning in childhood. These findings highlight the importance of early, trauma-informed, and affirming approaches within pediatric settings.
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Megan S. Schuler
RAND Corporation
Aarya Suryavanshi
RAND Corporation
Academic Pediatrics
RAND Corporation
Raulerson Hospital
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Schuler et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0fb9792badbc352afe9bbf — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acap.2026.103315
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