PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Research finds 1 out of 4 youth screen positive for suicide risk in an emergency department; majority of those who identify as transgender, gender diverse, screen positive

Universal screening for suicide risk revealed a high proportion of youth in need of mental health services at one hospital

2023-10-20
(Press-News.org) For release: 12:01 a.m. ET Friday, Oct. 20, 2023 

AAP media contacts: Lisa Black, 630-626-6084, lblack@aap.org 

Tom McPheron, 630-626-6315, tmcpheron@aap.org  

                               Adam Alexander, 630-626-6765, aalexander@aap.org 

Washington, D.C.— Nearly 80% of emergency department encounters involving transgender or gender diverse youth ages 10 and older screened positive for suicide risk while seeking treatment at a Chicago emergency department over a 3.5-year period, according to research presented during the 2023 AAP National Conference & Exhibition at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center.  

The abstract, “Suicidal Ideation in Transgender and Gender Diverse Youth in the Emergency Department,” examines data provided after universal suicide screening was implemented in the Emergency Department for all youth 10 and older who presented at Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago between September 2019-August 2022. Researchers found that in 24% of 12,112 ED encounters, patients screened positive for suicide risk. Using the electronic medical record, the author identified that of 565 encounters by transgender and gender diverse youth, positive suicide risk was identified in 78% of encounters, with 10% of encounters by transgender and gender diverse youth endorsing active suicidal ideation at the time of ED presentation.   

“Unfortunately, these findings did not surprise me as I routinely see transgender and gender diverse youth struggling with their mental health in my practice as a clinical psychologist,” said abstract author Amanda Burnside, PhD Attending Pediatric Psychologist at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago and Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine.  “Common contributing factors include bullying and discrimination, and it is imperative that we continue to support these youth.” 

 Compared to cisgender youth, transgender and gender diverse youth were 5.35 times more likely to screen positive for suicide risk.  

"We should work to ensure that all youth are routinely screened for suicide risk across every health care setting,” Dr. Burnside said. “We need to develop robust systems to connect youth who screen positive with mental health services." 

More than 77% of emergency department encounters by transgender and gender diverse youth were for a chief complaint centered on mental health, according to the research. 

“Caregivers and other supportive adults should routinely check in with transgender and gender diverse youth about their mental health.  Any concerns can be brought to the attention of the youth's pediatrician. The National Suicide and Crisis Line is also available as a resource 24/7 by calling 988.” 

This work was supported by Stanley Manne Children’s Research Institute at Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago through the Mental Health Springboard Award (2022). 

Dr. Burnside is scheduled to present her research, which is below, from 4:45 p.m.- 4:55 p.m. ET Monday, Oct. 23. To request an interview, contact Julianne Bardele at JBardele@luriechildrens.org.  

 In addition, Dr. Burnside will be among highlighted abstract authors who will give a brief presentations and be available for interviews during a press conference from 8 -9 a.m. ET Sunday, Oct. 22 in the National Conference Press Room 102 AB. During the meeting, you may reach AAP media relations staff in the press room.  

Please note: only the abstract is being presented at the meeting. In some cases, the researcher may have more data available to share with media, or may be preparing a longer article for submission to a journal.   

 

# # #  

 

The American Academy of Pediatrics is an organization of 67,000 primary care pediatricians, pediatric medical subspecialists and pediatric surgical specialists dedicated to the health, safety and well-being of infants, children, adolescents and young adults. For more information, visit www.aap.org. Reporters can access the meeting program and other relevant meeting information through the AAP meeting website at http://www.aapexperience.org/ 

 

ABSTRACT 

Program Name: AAP National Conference & Exhibition  

Submission Type: Section on LGBT Health and Wellness  

Abstract Title: Suicidal Ideation in Transgender and Gender Diverse Youth in the Emergency Department  

Amanda Burnside  

Chicago, IL, United States  

 

Background: Suicide among transgender and gender diverse (TGD) youth represents a national crisis. One in four high school youth who identify as a sexual or gender minority attempts suicide during a 6-month period, and nearly half of these youth seriously consider attempting suicide. In healthcare settings, research involving TGD individuals has historically been limited to specialized clinic populations or youth with gender-specific diagnostic codes documented in the electronic medical record (EMR). However, this approach likely significantly underestimates the prevalence of TGD youth in healthcare settings. To bridge this gap, one study utilized an EMR keyword search strategy to identify transgender youth, but this study did not identify other youth on the gender diversity spectrum. Our objective was to develop a novel keyword-based method for identifying TGD youth in the EMR and to employ this method to identify rates of suicidal ideation among TGD youth in the emergency department (ED).  

Methods: We conducted a retrospective cross-sectional study of ED encounters by youth who received suicide screening at an urban tertiary children’s hospital from September 2019-August 2022. Suicide screening was conducted using Ask Suicide-Screening Questions (ASQ). TGD youth were identified using keyword searching. If any of 9 keywords (they/them, preferred name, pronouns, male-to-female, female-to-male, nonbinary, agender, transgender, gender dysphoria) were present in the ED note, the surrounding text was extracted and manually reviewed to determine whether the text conveyed TGD status.  

Results: The ASQ was administered in 12,112 ED encounters, and 1 in 4 (24%) encounters had a positive screen. We identified 565 ED encounters by 399 unique TGD youth. Thirty-one percent of ED encounters by TGD youth contained just one keyword. TGD youth ranged from 8 to 23 years old and were 43% White, 35% Latinx, 10% Black, 4% Asian, and 8% other/two or more races. Of TGD youth, 43% were publicly insured and 52% resided in a neighborhood with a “low” or “very low” Child Opportunity Index category. For TGD youth specifically, most identified ED encounters (77.5%) were for a mental health chief complaint. In 81% of TGD encounters, TGD youth screened positive on the ASQ with 10% endorsing active suicidal ideation at the time of ED presentation.  

Conclusion: Use of a keyword-based method to identify TGD youth in the EMR revealed high rates of suicidal ideation, which may inform suicide prevention efforts. Future analyses will further characterize ED encounters by TGD youth, including characteristics associated with suicidal ideation and trends in rates of suicidal ideation over time. This work was supported by Stanley Manne Children’s Research Institute at Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago through the Mental Health Springboard Award (2022).  

# # #  

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Safely removing nanoplastics from water using 'Prussian blue', a pigment used to dye jeans

Safely removing nanoplastics from water using Prussian blue, a pigment used to dye jeans
2023-10-20
Plastic waste breaks down over time into microplastics (<0.1 μm). Microplastics smaller than 20 μm cannot be removed in currently operating water treatment plants and must be agglomerated to a larger size and then removed. Iron (Fe) or aluminum (Al) based flocculants are used for this purpose, but they are not the ultimate solution as they remain in the water and cause severe toxicity to humans, requiring a separate treatment process. Dr. Jae-Woo Choi of the Center for Water Cycle Research at ...

Body image, social media and gender biases associated with kids quitting sports

2023-10-20
ORLANDO, Fla. (October 20, 2023) – Body image issues, social media, gender biases and coaching styles may be causing young athletes to quit sports, according to research presented by Nemours Children’s Health at the 2023 American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) National Conference & Exhibition. Previous studies have found that 70% of children quit sports by age 13, and by age 14 girls quit at twice the rate of boys. “Youth sports participation sets up children for a lifetime of healthy habits. Kids who participate ...

AAP 2023: Nemours Children’s presents research on body image & sports attrition, social determinants & obesity, and autism screening in primary care

2023-10-20
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (October 20, 2023) – Researchers from Nemours Children’s Health will present findings from a range of studies, and Nemours physician Steven Selbst, MD, will receive the Jim Seidel Distinguished Service Award for emergency medicine contributions at the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) National Conference & Exhibition, Oct. 20 – 24 in Washington, DC. “Nemours’ vision is to go well beyond medicine – to help children everywhere stay healthy and grow into healthy adults,” ...

American Academy of Pediatrics reviews toddler ‘formulas,’ questions marketing of drinks

2023-10-20
Media contacts: Lisa Black, lblack@aap.org; or Adam Alexander, aalexander@aap.org    Toddler “formulas” that are promoted as nutritious drinks for the older infant or preschooler are generally unnecessary and nutritionally incomplete, and the marketing practices that promote them are questionable, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics.  The AAP has published a new clinical report, “Older Infant-Young Child ‘Formulas,’ ” that reviews the growing array of drinks aimed at children ages 6-36 months and observes ...

Algorithm and blues: how to judge music plagiarism?

Algorithm and blues: how to judge music plagiarism?
2023-10-20
Ed Sheeran convinced a jury this year that he didn’t rip off Marvin Gaye’s `Let’s Get It On.’ By way of contrast, Pharrell Williams and Robin Thicke earlier failed to establish that `Blurred Lines’ wasn’t a copy of Gaye’s `Got to Give It Up.’ Could automated algorithms bring a new objectivity to music copyright infringement decisions, limiting the number, scale and expense of court cases? Musicologist Dr Patrick Savage of the University of Auckland researched the topic in collaboration with Yuchen Yuan of Keio University, ...

Gut microbiota-derived 7-DHC ameliorates circadian rhythm disorders and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)

Gut microbiota-derived 7-DHC ameliorates circadian rhythm disorders and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)
2023-10-20
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic inflammatory disease of the gastrointestinal tract categorized into ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. Currently, aminosalicylates, glucocorticoids, immunomodulating drugs, and biological agents are common strategies for the treatment of IBD. The efficacy of these therapies is limited, however, and they are frequently associated with multiple adverse effects.   Recently, Life Metabolism published a study entitled “7-Dehydrocholesterol protects against circadian disruption and experimental colitis: potential role of RORα/γ”, which shows that gut microbiota-derived metabolite ...

Sustainable cosmetics: harnessing cyanobacteria for natural active ingredients

Sustainable cosmetics: harnessing cyanobacteria for natural active ingredients
2023-10-20
The cosmetics industry is turning towards natural alternatives to chemical agents used in products to pave way towards a more sustainable future. Researchers are searching for nature-derived active ingredients for skincare products through extensive bioprospecting research. In this regard, cyanobacteria, with their remarkable metabolic capacity, are a promising source of such agents. Having existed on Earth for nearly 3.5 billion years, these photosynthetic organisms have adapted to various environmental ...

Consistent lack of sleep is related to future depressive symptoms

2023-10-20
Consistently sleeping less than five hours a night might raise the risk of developing depressive symptoms, according to a new genetic study led by UCL (University College London) researchers. Historically, poor sleep has been seen as a side effect of mental ill health, but this study found that the link between sleep and mental illness is more complex. The study, published in the journal Translational Psychiatry, analysed data from people with an average age of 65 and found short sleep was associated with the onset of depressive symptoms. Lead author Odessa S. Hamilton (UCL Institute of Epidemiology ...

Identifying the maker of an artwork by fingerprint examination

Identifying the maker of an artwork by fingerprint examination
2023-10-20
Dzemila Sero, now Migelien Gerritzen Fellow at the Rijksmuseum and former postdoc at the Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica, together with a team of researchers from the Rijksmuseum, Leiden and Cambridge University, examined the terracotta sculpture Study for a Hovering Putto attributed to Laurent Delvaux (1696 - 1778) and housed in the Rijksmuseum permanent collection. The methodology and findings were published open access in Science Advances in a paper with title "Artist profiling using micro-CT scanning of a Rijksmuseum terracotta sculpture". To acquire preserved impressions on the sculpture, researchers ...

Dietary supplement modifies gut microbiome – potential implications for bone marrow transplant patients

2023-10-20
Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and the University of Michigan conducted a phase I pilot study to assess the feasibility of using potato starch as a dietary intervention to modify the gut microbiome in bone marrow transplant patients. The study, which appears in the journal Nature Medicine, is the first part of a two-phase ongoing clinical trial evaluating the effect of modifying the microbiome on the incidence of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), a major complication that develops in up to half ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Chiral nanocomposite for highly selective dual-mode sensing and bioimaging of hydrogen sulfide

UCLA researchers develop new risk scoring system to account for role of chronic illness in post-surgery mortality

Mount Sinai BioDesign expands industry collaborations to expedite and enhance the development of innovative surgical technologies

Study reveals limits of using land surface temperature to explain heat hazards in Miami-Dade County

The Lancet Public Health: Accelerating actions to eliminate tobacco smoking could help increase life expectancy and prevent millions of premature deaths by 2050, modelling study suggests

The Lancet Public Health: Banning tobacco sales among young people could prevent 1.2 million lung cancer deaths, global modelling study suggests

One million people who never regularly smoked now vape in England

Methane emissions from dairy farms higher than thought - but conversion could reduce emissions

Early foster care gave poor women power, 17th-century records reveal

Unpacking polar sea ice

U of M Medical School receives $3.2M to study drivers of chronic low back pain

UT Health San Antonio School of Nursing’s Caring for the Caregiver program earns national award

People infer the past better than the future, study finds

Sexual and gender minorities more likely to experience life dissatisfaction, isolation, stress

In surgery for localized muscle-invasive bladder cancer, extended lymph node removal offers no survival benefit but does increase morbidity

“Nature-First Cities”, a new book explores how to invite nature back home, without evicting people

Health care site- and patient-related factors influencing COVID-19 vaccination completion rates

SwRI-built solar wind plasma sensor to help track space weather

Filament structure activates and regulates CRISPR-Cas ‘protein scissors’

Environmental quality of life benefits women worldwide

Satisfying friendships could be key for young, single adults’ happiness

Wild banana relatives of mainland Southeast Asia reveal hidden diversity and the urgent need to preserve nature’s genetic resources for future crops

A century of data uncovers how chestnut blight has devastated the American chestnut - and how forest composition has evolved since - in Shenanoah National Park, Virginia

Migration in adolescence may double the risk of psychosis in later life

Iron nuggets in the Pinnacles unlock secrets of ancient and future climates

Severe climate change may increase violence against women

Higher-order interactions can remodel the landscape of complex systems

New cardiovascular disease risk marker discovered in older women

Storms, floods, landslides associated with intimate partner violence against women two years later

How do ‘double skeptics’ affect government policy on climate and vaccination?

[Press-News.org] Research finds 1 out of 4 youth screen positive for suicide risk in an emergency department; majority of those who identify as transgender, gender diverse, screen positive
Universal screening for suicide risk revealed a high proportion of youth in need of mental health services at one hospital