Briefing

NEWS BRIEFING: Experts warn same-sex marriage debate is putting children and adolescents at risk

Publicly released:
Australia; New Zealand; VIC

***BRIEFING RECORDING NOW AVAILABLE*** As the marriage equality debate continues, misinformation is circulating in the public domain that children and adolescents with same-sex parents are at risk of poorer health and wellbeing than other children. Thirteen of Australia’s top paediatricians have published a review of the evidence in the Medical Journal of Australia, finding that children raised in same-sex parented families do as well as children raised by heterosexual couple parents. Tune in to this online briefing to hear from the lead author of the review, and ask him your questions.

Media release

From:

Play briefing recording

Speaker:

  • Professor Frank Oberklaid - Co-Group Leader of Child Health Policy, Equity and Translation at the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, Director of the Centre for Community Child Health at The Royal Children's Hospital, and an Honorary Professor of Paediatrics at the University of Melbourne

Media release from Murdoch Children’s Research Institute:

As the marriage equality debate continues, misinformation is circulating in the public domain that children and adolescents with same-sex parents are at risk of poorer health and wellbeing than other children.

Australia’s top paediatricians reviewed the evidence, published in the Medical Journal of Australia, titled The kids are OK: it is discrimination not same-sex parents that harms children, and found that children raised in same-sex parented families do as well as children raised by heterosexual couple parents.

The consensus of three decades of peer-reviewed research is that children raised in same-sex parented families do as well emotionally, socially and educationally as children raised by heterosexual couple parents. These findings have been replicated across independent studies in Australia and internationally.

“The negative and discriminatory rhetoric of the current same-sex marriage debate is damaging the most vulnerable members of our community – children and adolescents.”

“It’s essential that we recognise the potential for the debate about marriage equality to cause harm for our children and young people,” senior author Professor Frank Oberklaid said.

Young people who express diversity in their sexual orientation or gender identity experience some of the highest rates of psychological distress in Australia.

“Young LGBTIQ+ people are much more likely to experience poor mental health, self-harm and suicide than other young people. Sadly, this is largely attributed to the harassment, stigma and discrimination they and other LGBTIQ+ individuals and communities face in our society,” Professor Oberklaid said.

There is solid evidence in countries that have legalised same-sex marriage that it has had a positive impact on the mental health and wellbeing of same-sex parented families and LGBTIQ+ young people.

“As part of the medical community we feel a duty of care to all groups in our society, particularly to those who are vulnerable. Our duty extends to making sure that accurate, objective interpretations of the best available evidence are available and inaccuracies are corrected in an effort to reduce the destructiveness of public debate,” Professor Oberklaid said.

As leaders in child health in Australia, Melbourne Children’s - which is made of up of four premier child health organisations - The Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, The Royal Children’s Hospital, the University of Melbourne, Department of Paediatrics and The Royal Children’s Hospital Foundation – is standing up for our most vulnerable members of the community – children.

“Melbourne Children’s supports equality for all. We stand behind the evidence that children raised in same-sex parented families do as well as children raised by heterosexual parents. The social stigma and discrimination faced by these families and young LGBTQI individuals must end and so we call for a halt to the distribution of the negative messages that have the potential to cause harm for children and young people during the marriage equality debate,” Professor Oberklaid said.

About Melbourne Children’s

Melbourne Children’s physically brings together four organisations; The Royal Children’s Hospital Melbourne, the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, the University of Melbourne, Department of Paediatrics and The Royal Children’s Hospital Foundation at a single, purpose-built and multi-award winning campus in the city of Melbourne.

Melbourne Children’s is a fully integrated paediatric teaching hospital and research institute which is unique in Australia and acclaimed internationally.

The purpose of Melbourne Children’s is to collaborate, as world leaders, in advancing child and adolescent health through prevention, early intervention and health promotion, together with the highest quality clinical care, outstanding research and comprehensive education and training.

Attachments

Note: Not all attachments are visible to the general public. Research URLs will go live after the embargo ends.

Video Australian Science Media Centre, Web page Briefing recording
Journal/
conference:
Medical Journal of Australia
Organisation/s: , The University of Melbourne, University of Auckland
Funder:
Media Contact/s
Contact details are only visible to registered journalists.