
Tyler Clementi killed
himself because he believed
his roommate taped him
having sex with a man
An American study suggests that attempted suicide rates
among gay teenagers are higher in areas considered less liberal.
The research involved more than 32,000 high school students
in the state of Oregon.
Lead study author Mark Hatzenbuehler, a Columbia University
psychologist, said politically conservative areas had substantially more
teenage suicides attempts – both gay and straight.
Higher risk rates were found in areas where schools did not
have gay-supportive school programmes.
Mr Hatzenbuehler’s team said that suicide risks among teens
who were not bullied or depressed were higher when they lived in areas with
relatively few Democrats.
The researchers used numbers of Democrats to calculate how
liberal an area was.
The study was published in the journal Paediatrics today.
The US has seen a number of high-profile suicides among
LGBT youngsters in the last six months.
One involved a university student who jumped to his death
because he believed his roommate had taped him having sex with a man.
Tyler Clementi, who was described as a gifted student, had
not told anyone he was gay.
Mr Hatzenbuehler’s team found that roughly 20 per cent of
the gay youths they surveyed had attempted suicide, compared with just four per
cent of straight teens.
They found that 25 per cent of gay teens in the least
liberal counties had tried to kill themselves, compared with 20 per cent in the
most liberal areas.