Published In
International Journal of Lgbtq+ Youth Studies
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
3-30-2026
Subjects
Gender-creative, Draw-and-Tell Conversations, Arts-based research, Pediatric healthcare, Social support
Abstract
Gender-creative children have an elevated risk of healthcare avoidance and adverse health outcomes related to stigma and discrimination. Despite evidence that family affirmation is protective and pediatric providers influence care outcomes, young children’s perspectives related to their social support and clinical experiences remain underrepresented in health research. Indeed, children’s agency has been historically restricted in healthcare and health research. This community-engaged, artsbased, qualitative study used Draw-and-Tell Conversations—a participatory approach combining drawing, storytelling, and writing—with 12U.S.-based gender-creative children (ages 5–10). Although children’s caregivers completed surveys to contextualize findings, the project highlighted children’s capacity to report on their own experiences. Data were analyzed using reflexive thematic analysis and poetic inquiry. Participants expressed discomfort in clinical settings but identified trusted adults with whom they could discuss gender. Drawing facilitated confidence and clarity in communication. Findings reveal missed opportunities in pediatric care and research to engage directly with gender-creative children. This study contributes child-centered, empirically grounded recommendations for gender-affirming care and highlights the value of arts-based methods in health research with children.
Rights
Copyright (c) 2026 The Authors
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Locate the Document
DOI
10.1080/29968992.2026.2653541
Persistent Identifier
https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/44616
Citation Details
Lenne, E. L., Anderson-Nathe, B., Sun, C. J., & Driessnack, M. (2026). “ I know who I am ”: Gender-creative children Draw-and-Tell their social and healthcare experiences. International Journal of LGBTQ+ Youth Studies, 1–31.
