One in four Black transgender or nonbinary youths attempted suicide in the previous year, a figure more than twice the rate of their Black cisgender peers, according to a new research brief from the Trevor Project that called the situation “a public health crisis that deserves immediate attention.”

The results were among key findings of the latest brief compiled by the Trevor Project as it combs through data collected from nearly 34,000 LGBTQ+ young people nationwide for its 2022 National Survey on LGBTQ+ Youth Mental Health. The organization, based in New York, focuses on suicide prevention for LGBTQ+ youths.

“This report is yet another piece of evidence that we aren’t doing enough to fight for these kids,” said Jack Turban, director of the gender psychiatry program at the University of California San Francisco. “Improving the situation will mean making broad structural and societal improvements in the ways we treat trans youth of color. Unfortunately, we seem to be moving in the opposite direction.”

Of 3,008 survey respondents who identified as Black, 25% of those also identifying as trans or nonbinary reported attempting suicide in the previous year, the report said, compared to 12% of their cisgender peers who identified as gay, lesbian or bisexual. The figure was also higher than that of their white trans or nonbinary counterparts (16%).

A group facing unique obstacles

The results, the report said, reflect challenges faced by Black transgender and nonbinary youngsters as members of dual marginalized communities, a situation exacerbated by waves of anti-LGBTQ legislation that have proliferated in recent years.

The American Civil Liberties Union said 336 anti-LGBTQ bills have been introduced in statehouses across the country in 2023, eclipsing the record 315 tallied by the Human Rights Campaign in 2022. Many bills target transgender youths, prohibiting gender-affirming care or participation on school sports teams aligned with their gender identity.

“It can’t be understated, the degree of transphobia we are seeing among politicians,” said Gina Sequeira, co-director of the Seattle Children’s Gender Clinic in Washington state. “The patients I take care of are incredibly fearful of the atmosphere they see.”

A person spreads wings with the words "Black Trans Lives Matter" written on them during the Brooklyn Liberation's Protect Trans Youth event at the Brooklyn Museum on June 13, 2021, in the Brooklyn borough in New York City. Brooklyn Liberation organized a march and rally as an emergency action response to legislation to restrict trans rights across 34 states. According to the Human Rights Campaign, there have been over 250 bills introduced in state legislatures aimed at the LGBTQ community in 2021.

Another factor, Sequeira noted, is record levels of fatal violence suffered by transgender victims in recent years, especially Black trans women.

“We have to acknowledge that societal racism and transphobia directly correlate with some of the findings we see,” she said.

How do these disparities play out?

In general, transgender and nonbinary youths experience higher rates of suicide and suicidal thoughts, and with suicide rates among young Black people rising 37% from 2018 to 2021, researchers said those who belong to both groups may be “more susceptible to negative experiences and chronic stress” as a result.