Purpose
To synthesize the diverse body of literature on sexual and gender minority youth (SGMY) and sexual health education.
Methods
We conducted a systematic search of the literature on SGMY and sexual health education, including SGMY perspectives on sexual health education, the acceptability or effectiveness of programs designed for SGMY, and SGMY-specific results of sexual health education programs delivered to general youth populations.
Results
A total of 32 articles were included. Sixteen qualitative studies with SGMY highlight key perspectives underscoring how youth gained inadequate knowledge from sexual health education experiences and received content that excluded their identities and behaviors. Thirteen studies examined the acceptability or effectiveness of sexual health interventions designed for SGMY from which key characteristics of inclusive sexual health education relating to development, content, and delivery emerged. One study found a sexual health education program delivered to a general population of youth was also acceptable for a subsample of sexual minority girls.
Conclusions
Future research on SGMY experiences should incorporate populations understudied, including younger adolescents, sexual minority girls, and transgender persons. Further, the effectiveness of inclusive sexual health education in general population settings requires further study.
- Sanjana Pampati, MPH, Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE)
- Michelle Johns, MPH, PhD, Center for Disease Control and Prevention
- Leigh Szucs, PhD, CHES, Center for Disease Control and Prevention
- Lisa Barrios, DrPH, Center for Disease Control and Prevention