The Impact of Supportive Parent Actions on LGBTQ+ Youth
Gender-identity-focused data shows supportive parent and caregiver actions are associated with lower suicide risk in LGBTQ+ youth.
Overview

Added
March 5, 2026
Related situation
Audience
learner
Grade range
Grade 9 (Freshman)–Grade 12 (Senior)
Page kind
Article
Introduction
The Impact of Supportive Parent Actions on LGBTQ+ Youth
- Core Finding: High levels of family acceptance and support are strongly linked to improved mental health, higher self-esteem, and significantly lower rates of suicidal ideation and attempts among LGBTQ+ youth.
- Impact of Rejection: Family rejection acts as a form of "minority stress," which is associated with higher rates of depression, substance use, and suicide attempts.
- Most Common Supportive Actions:
- Cisgender LGBQ youth: Being welcoming to friends/partners (75%), talking respectfully about identity (67%), and supporting gender expression (52%).
- Transgender/Nonbinary/Questioning youth: Being welcoming to friends/partners (69%), talking respectfully about identity (57%), and supporting gender expression (51%).
- Suicide Risk Reduction:
- For cisgender LGBQ youth, 8 of 11 supportive actions were linked to lower suicide attempt odds (up to 47% lower).
- For transgender/nonbinary/questioning youth, 11 of 12 supportive actions were linked to lower suicide attempt odds (up to 42% lower).
- Key Action: "Talking with youth respectfully about their LGBTQ identity" was consistently one of the most effective actions for all groups, associated with over 40% lower odds of a suicide attempt.
- Disparities in Support: Parents of transgender, nonbinary, and gender-questioning youth reported lower frequencies of supportive actions compared to parents of cisgender LGBQ youth, suggesting a potential need for more targeted education and resources for these families.
- Methodology: Data derived from The Trevor Project’s 2022 National Survey on LGBTQ Youth Mental Health, involving 33,993 participants (surveyed Sept–Dec 2021).
- Takeaway: There is a critical need for increased education for parents and caregivers on how to perform specific, affirming actions to protect the mental health of their LGBTQ+ children.
Official site and publisher details from listings appear below before you open the site.
Website
Community reviews
No published reviews yet. Be the first to share your experience.