Social media use and experiences among transgender and gender diverse adolescents

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Social media use and experiences among transgender and gender diverse adolescents. / Herrmann, Lena; Bindt, Carola; Hohmann, Sarah; Becker-Hebly, Inga.

In: INT J TRANSGEND HEAL, Vol. 25, No. 1, 2024, p. 36-49.

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@article{d5566a17a3c6433699736beeb010eb52,
title = "Social media use and experiences among transgender and gender diverse adolescents",
abstract = "Objectives: For transgender and gender diverse (TGD) adolescents, the internet and social media have several risks and benefits. The present study aims at assessing how and for which purposes TGD adolescents use the internet and social media and how often they experience support compared to cyberbullying online.Methods: The sample comprised 114 TGD adolescents diagnosed with gender dysphoria who attended a Gender Identity Service for children and adolescents (Hamburg GIS). Internet and social media use and experiences were assessed using modified items from a German representative study and self-constructed items relating to TGD-specific online experiences. Frequencies of internet/social media use and various online experiences were analyzed and compared to data from the German general population.Results: Compared to peers from the general population, TGD adolescents reported similar offline and online activities and spent similarly long time online (internet: M = 4.16 h, social media: M = 2.84 h). All TGD adolescents sought TGD-specific information online. TGD adolescents used the internet to experiment with their gender identity (60%), and for the purpose of their coming out (31%) and their social transition (88%). About half of the sample each reported either online support (45%) and/or cyberbullying (48%).Conclusions: While TGD adolescents used the internet and social media for similar purposes as peers from the general population, they also used the internet and social media to gain TGD-specific information and for gender identity expression and exploration. They reported both positive and negative experiences online, calling for future studies investigating how online experiences affect TGD adolescents{\textquoteright} mental health and gender identity development.",
author = "Lena Herrmann and Carola Bindt and Sarah Hohmann and Inga Becker-Hebly",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2023 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1080/26895269.2023.2252410",
language = "English",
volume = "25",
pages = "36--49",
journal = "INT J TRANSGEND HEAL",
issn = "2689-5269",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Social media use and experiences among transgender and gender diverse adolescents

AU - Herrmann, Lena

AU - Bindt, Carola

AU - Hohmann, Sarah

AU - Becker-Hebly, Inga

N1 - © 2023 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Objectives: For transgender and gender diverse (TGD) adolescents, the internet and social media have several risks and benefits. The present study aims at assessing how and for which purposes TGD adolescents use the internet and social media and how often they experience support compared to cyberbullying online.Methods: The sample comprised 114 TGD adolescents diagnosed with gender dysphoria who attended a Gender Identity Service for children and adolescents (Hamburg GIS). Internet and social media use and experiences were assessed using modified items from a German representative study and self-constructed items relating to TGD-specific online experiences. Frequencies of internet/social media use and various online experiences were analyzed and compared to data from the German general population.Results: Compared to peers from the general population, TGD adolescents reported similar offline and online activities and spent similarly long time online (internet: M = 4.16 h, social media: M = 2.84 h). All TGD adolescents sought TGD-specific information online. TGD adolescents used the internet to experiment with their gender identity (60%), and for the purpose of their coming out (31%) and their social transition (88%). About half of the sample each reported either online support (45%) and/or cyberbullying (48%).Conclusions: While TGD adolescents used the internet and social media for similar purposes as peers from the general population, they also used the internet and social media to gain TGD-specific information and for gender identity expression and exploration. They reported both positive and negative experiences online, calling for future studies investigating how online experiences affect TGD adolescents’ mental health and gender identity development.

AB - Objectives: For transgender and gender diverse (TGD) adolescents, the internet and social media have several risks and benefits. The present study aims at assessing how and for which purposes TGD adolescents use the internet and social media and how often they experience support compared to cyberbullying online.Methods: The sample comprised 114 TGD adolescents diagnosed with gender dysphoria who attended a Gender Identity Service for children and adolescents (Hamburg GIS). Internet and social media use and experiences were assessed using modified items from a German representative study and self-constructed items relating to TGD-specific online experiences. Frequencies of internet/social media use and various online experiences were analyzed and compared to data from the German general population.Results: Compared to peers from the general population, TGD adolescents reported similar offline and online activities and spent similarly long time online (internet: M = 4.16 h, social media: M = 2.84 h). All TGD adolescents sought TGD-specific information online. TGD adolescents used the internet to experiment with their gender identity (60%), and for the purpose of their coming out (31%) and their social transition (88%). About half of the sample each reported either online support (45%) and/or cyberbullying (48%).Conclusions: While TGD adolescents used the internet and social media for similar purposes as peers from the general population, they also used the internet and social media to gain TGD-specific information and for gender identity expression and exploration. They reported both positive and negative experiences online, calling for future studies investigating how online experiences affect TGD adolescents’ mental health and gender identity development.

U2 - 10.1080/26895269.2023.2252410

DO - 10.1080/26895269.2023.2252410

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 38328588

VL - 25

SP - 36

EP - 49

JO - INT J TRANSGEND HEAL

JF - INT J TRANSGEND HEAL

SN - 2689-5269

IS - 1

ER -