New research from the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN) at King's College London, in partnership with Sichuan University, Chengdu, has found that people that show traits and behaviours that differ from gender stereotypes may be at greater risk of a range of common mental health difficulties, including anxiety, depression and low self-esteem.
The researchers analysed 1975 published reports exploring the relationship between gender nonconformity and poor mental health, with a total sample size of between 25,000 and 142,000 participants depending on the mental health problem studied.
The research, published in Clinical Psychology Review, found that higher levels of gender nonconformity (i.e., when a person's interests, behaviours, appearance or personality traits don't conform to gender stereotypes and societal norms) were linked with higher levels of generalised anxiety symptoms, depressive symptoms, lower self-esteem, and increased risk of self-harm and suicide attempts. The links to generalised anxiety symptoms, depressive symptoms and self-esteem were stronger in men than in women, and the link to depressive symptoms was stronger in adolescence than in childhood.
The authors explain the link with mental health difficulties could be due to a lack of tolerance of gender nonconforming behaviours or traits among societies, resulting in victimisation.
Reported gender nonconformity, particular that focusing on behaviours rather than dispositions, was consistently associated with poorer mental health but depended on the type of mental health problem studied as well as factors such as sex and age. Our results suggest that more understanding and tolerance of behaviours that differ from gender stereotypes could be beneficial to the mental health of individuals who display greater gender nonconformity. Further research on possible interventions to improve overall psychological wellbeing in people who display greater gender nonconformity is also needed.
Dr Yin Xu, senior research fellow at Sichuan University and the study's first author
Perceptions of gender nonconformity - which is separate from "gender identity" - is dependent on societal norms, so may vary between countries and cultures.
The researchers also found that behaviour-based nonconformity (which is more socially visible) was more strongly linked to depressive symptoms and self-esteem compared to personality trait-based non-conformity. There was no influence of sexual orientation on these patterns.
There was no influence of sexual orientation on the pattern we found, which is unusual since gender nonconformity and being non-heterosexual are strongly linked over the life-course. It appears that gender nonconformity is associated with poorer mental health irrespective of one's sexuality. The fact that the link was stronger in adolescence is consistent with the growing picture from our programme of research showing that vulnerabilities early in life among gender nonconforming and LGBTQ+ people are linked to their preponderance of poorer mental health.
Dr Qazi Rahman, Co-Director of the LGBTQ+ Mental Health Research Group at King's IoPPN and the study's senior author
Dr Rahman continued, "Being the target of victimisation due to one's own gender nonconforming behaviours is likely a precipitating factor. However, other factors early in life might also be important."
Gender nonconformity and common mental health problems: A meta-analysis (DOI10.1016/j.cpr.2024.102500) (Xin Xu, Jinghao Feng, Qazi Rahman) was published in Clinical Psychology Review.