Birth order in girls with gender identity
disorder.
Zucker KJ, Lightbody S, Pecore K,
Bradley SJ, Blanchard R.
Child and Adolescent Gender Identity Clinic,
Child and Family Studies Centre, Clarke Institute of Psychiatry, Toronto,
Ontario, Canada.
Abstract [Full Text] [PDF]
Abstract
This study examined the birth order of
girls with gender identity disorder (N = 22). Each proband was matched to 3-7
clinical control girls for age at assessment and number of siblings (the mode
number of controls per proband was 7) (total N = 147). The number of older
brothers, older sisters, younger brothers, and younger sisters was recorded.
Slater's birth order index showed that the
probands were significantly more likely to be early born than were the
controls. A modified Slater's index also compared the birth order of the
probands and the controls only to their brothers (when they had one or more)
and only to their sisters (when they had one or more). Compared to the
controls, the probands were born early compared to their sisters, but not to
their brothers.
These findings are the inverse of two
previous studies of boys with gender identity disorder, who were later born
relative to clinical control boys, an effect that appeared to be accounted for
primarily by being born later relative to older brothers, but not to older
sisters.
Citation:
Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry 1998 Mar;7(1):30-5 an
article published on the Internet by PubMed
<http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/>