Abstract
Child maltreatment, mental health disorders, and health risk behaviors in people with diverse gender identities.
Madzoska, M., Lawrence, D., Higgins, D., Haslam, D., Mathews, B., Malacova, E., Dunne, M., Erksine, H., Pacella, R., Meinck, F., Thomas, H. & Scott, J.
This study examined rates of mental health disorders and health risk
behaviors in people with diverse gender identities and associations with five types of child maltreatment. We used data from the Australian Child
Maltreatment Study (ACMS), a nationally representative survey of Australian
residents aged 16 years and more, which was designed to understand the
experience of child maltreatment (physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional
abuse, neglect, exposure to domestic violence). Mental disorders—major
depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), alcohol use
disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and health risk behaviors—
smoking, binge drinking, cannabis dependence, self-harm, and suicide
attempt in the past 12 months were assessed. People with diverse gender
identities who experienced child maltreatment were significantly more likely
to have GAD (43.3%; 95% CI [30.3, 56.2]) than those who had experienced
child maltreatment who were either cisgender men (13.8%; [12.0, 15.5])
or cisgender women (17.4%; [15.7, 19.2]). Similarly, higher prevalence was
found for PTSD (21.3%; [11.1, 31.5]), self-harm (27.8%; [17.1, 38.5]) and
suicide attempt (7.2%; [3.1, 11.3]) for people with diverse gender identities.
Trauma-informed approaches, attuned to the high likelihood of any child
maltreatment, and the co-occurrence of different kinds may benefit people
with diverse gender identities experiencing GAD, PTSD, self-harm, suicidal
behaviors, or other health risk behaviors.