Homelessness and Sexual Identity Among Middle School Students.
Publication Date
7-7-2015
Document Type
Article
Organizational Units
Graduate School of Social Work
Keywords
Special populations, Mental health, LGBQ youth, Human sexuality, School health instruction, Child and adolescent health, School health services
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, or questioning (LGBQ) high school students experience higher rates of homelessness than their heterosexual peers. Moreover, LGBQ high school students are more likely to stay in riskier locations (eg, with a stranger) and less likely to stay in a shelter. This study tested whether these trends also apply to middle school students.
METHODS
Using representative data, we examined sexual identity and homelessness among Los Angeles Unified School District middle school students.
RESULTS
Nearly 10% of middle school students identified as LGBQ and 23.5% experienced at least 1 night of homelessness during the previous year. Contrary to high school data, LGBQ students did not experience higher rates of homelessness overall. However, when limiting the sample to students who had experienced homelessness, LGBQ students were more than 5 times as likely as heterosexual students to have stayed in a public place and 63% as likely to have stayed in a shelter.
CONCLUSIONS
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, or questioning students are more likely to experience public homelessness. Schools must implement homelessness surveillance systems to assist in identifying early episodes of homelessness, thereby reducing the likelihood of poor physical and mental health outcomes associated with chronic homelessness.
Publication Statement
Copyright held by author or publisher. User is responsible for all copyright compliance.
Recommended Citation
Rice, E., Petering, R., Rhoades, H., BarmanAdhikari, A., Winetrobe, H., Plant, A., Montoya, J., & Kordic, T. (2015). Homelessness and sexual identity among middle school students. Journal of School Health, 85(8), 552-557. doi: 10.1111/josh.12280