When we go to ask for help, they don't understand how to help us: Understanding how youth with childhood histories of conduct problems link sexuality and gender to school‐based service use

Author:

Chilliak Shayla1,Martin‐Storey Alexa23ORCID,Déry Michèle23,Temcheff Caroline Elizabeth13,Lapalme Mélanie23

Affiliation:

1. Department of Education and Counselling Psychology McGill University Montreal Quebec Canada

2. Département de Psychoéducation Université de Sherbrooke Longueuil Quebec Canada

3. Université de Sherbrooke, Group for Research and Intervention on Children's Social Adjustment (GRISE) Sherbrooke Quebec Canada

Abstract

AbstractGender and, to a lesser extent, sexual identity, are relevant factors in understanding variance in the prevalence, consequences, and treatment of conduct problems. The current study uses thematic analysis to explore how youth with early‐onset conduct problems and extensive histories of school‐based service use perceive gender and sexuality as impacting their service use experiences. Qualitative analysis of interviews with 41 youth (17–21 years old; 53.7% women) yielded themes pertaining to gender, sexual identity, and discrimination in service use contexts. Identified themes included homophobia in service use and adjacent school contexts, stereotypes around masculinity and femininity as conditioning peer and school staff's behavior, and salience of sexuality across developmental stages and historical timeframes. Results suggest that increased school staff training and school‐based interventions be implemented to support gender and sexual diversity, both within services for conduct problems and more broadly in school contexts. In particular, the current findings highlight homophobia as a factor limiting boys' access to mental health services.

Funder

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

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