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Dive into the research topics where Hayley Wood is active.

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Featured researches published by Hayley Wood.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2004

Comparing Rates of Psychiatric and Behavior Disorders in Adolescents and Young Adults with Severe Intellectual Disability with and without Autism.

Elspeth Bradley; Jane Summers; Hayley Wood; Susan E. Bryson

Eight males and four females with an Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised (ADI-R) diagnosis of autism (mean age of 16.3 years) and severe intellectual disability (IQ < 40) were individually matched to controls on the basis of chronological age, gender, and nonverbal IQ. The dependent measure was the Diagnostic Assessment for the Severely Handicapped-II, which is used to screen for psychiatric and behavior disorders in lower-functioning individuals. Participants with autism showed significantly greater disturbances as measured by the Diagnostic Assessment for the Severely Handicapped-II total score and seven of 13 subscales. They also averaged 5.25 clinically significant disturbances compared with 1.25 disturbances for participants without autism. Specific vulnerabilities to anxiety, mood, sleep, organic syndromes, and stereotypies/tics were found in the participants with comorbid autism.


The Journal of Sexual Medicine | 2015

Evidence for an altered sex ratio in clinic-referred adolescents with gender dysphoria.

Madison Aitken; Thomas D. Steensma; Ray Blanchard; Doug P. VanderLaan; Hayley Wood; Amanda Fuentes; Cathy Spegg; Lori Wasserman; Megan Ames; C. Lindsay Fitzsimmons; Jonathan H. Leef; Victoria Lishak; Elyse Reim; Anna Takagi; Julia Vinik; Julia Wreford; Peggy T. Cohen-Kettenis; Annelou L. C. de Vries; Baudewijntje P.C. Kreukels; Kenneth J. Zucker

INTRODUCTION The number of adolescents referred to specialized gender identity clinics for gender dysphoria appears to be increasing and there also appears to be a corresponding shift in the sex ratio, from one favoring natal males to one favoring natal females. AIM We conducted two quantitative studies to ascertain whether there has been a recent inversion of the sex ratio of adolescents referred for gender dysphoria. METHODS The sex ratio of adolescents from two specialized gender identity clinics was examined as a function of two cohort periods (2006-2013 vs. prior years). Study 1 was conducted on patients from a clinic in Toronto, and Study 2 was conducted on patients from a clinic in Amsterdam. RESULTS Across both clinics, the total sample size was 748. In both clinics, there was a significant change in the sex ratio of referred adolescents between the two cohort periods: between 2006 and 2013, the sex ratio favored natal females, but in the prior years, the sex ratio favored natal males. In Study 1 from Toronto, there was no corresponding change in the sex ratio of 6,592 adolescents referred for other clinical problems. CONCLUSIONS Sociological and sociocultural explanations are offered to account for this recent inversion in the sex ratio of adolescents with gender dysphoria.


Journal of Homosexuality | 2012

A Developmental, Biopsychosocial Model for the Treatment of Children with Gender Identity Disorder

Kenneth J. Zucker; Hayley Wood; Devita Singh Ma; Susan J. Bradley

This article provides a summary of the therapeutic model and approach used in the Gender Identity Service at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto. The authors describe their assessment protocol, describe their current multifactorial case formulation model, including a strong emphasis on developmental factors, and provide clinical examples of how the model is used in the treatment.


Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy | 2012

Demographics, behavior problems, and psychosexual characteristics of adolescents with gender identity disorder or transvestic fetishism.

Kenneth J. Zucker; Susan J. Bradley; Allison Owen-Anderson; Sarah J. Kibblewhite; Hayley Wood; Devita Singh; Kathryn Choi

This study provided a descriptive and quantitative comparative analysis of data from an assessment protocol for adolescents referred clinically for gender identity disorder (n = 192; 105 boys, 87 girls) or transvestic fetishism (n = 137, all boys). The protocol included information on demographics, behavior problems, and psychosexual measures. Gender identity disorder and transvestic fetishism youth had high rates of general behavior problems and poor peer relations. On the psychosexual measures, gender identity disorder patients had considerably greater cross-gender behavior and gender dysphoria than did transvestic fetishism youth and other control youth. Male gender identity disorder patients classified as having a nonhomosexual sexual orientation (in relation to birth sex) reported more indicators of transvestic fetishism than did male gender identity disorder patients classified as having a homosexual sexual orientation (in relation to birth sex). The percentage of transvestic fetishism youth and male gender identity disorder patients with a nonhomosexual sexual orientation self-reported similar degrees of behaviors pertaining to transvestic fetishism. Last, male and female gender identity disorder patients with a homosexual sexual orientation had more recalled cross-gender behavior during childhood and more concurrent cross-gender behavior and gender dysphoria than did patients with a nonhomosexual sexual orientation. The authors discuss the clinical utility of their assessment protocol.


Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy | 2013

Patterns of Referral to a Gender Identity Service for Children and Adolescents (1976–2011): Age, Sex Ratio, and Sexual Orientation

Hayley Wood; Shoko Sasaki; Susan J. Bradley; Devita Singh; Sophia Fantus; Allison Owen-Anderson; Alexander Di Giacomo; Jerald Bain; Kenneth J. Zucker

In a previous Letter to the Editor (Zucker, Bradley, Owen-Anderson, Kibblewhite, & Cantor, 2008), we provided data on the number of referred children and adolescents to a specialized gender identity service between the years 1976–2007 (grouped by 4-year intervals). In that Letter, we noted three key observations: (a) the number of children assessed on an annual basis substantially exceeded the number of adolescents assessed; (b) the number of referred children increased sharply for the 1988–1991 cohort and had remained stable since that time; and (c) in the last cohort of adolescents (2004–2007), there was a sharp increase in the number of cases. Regarding the last point, we queried whether gender identity disorder in adolescents was “coming out of the closet” and suggested a number of reasons why this might be the case. In this Letter, we provide information on a new cohort (2008–2011) and, in addition, consider more carefully some other demographic factors, including the sex ratio, the sex ratio by age intervals, and the sexual orientation of the adolescent patients.


Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology | 2014

Behavioral and emotional problems on the teacher's report form: A cross-national, cross-clinic comparative analysis of gender dysphoric children and adolescents

Thomas D. Steensma; Kenneth J. Zucker; Baudewijntje P.C. Kreukels; Doug P. VanderLaan; Hayley Wood; Amanda Fuentes; Peggy T. Cohen-Kettenis

For gender dysphoric children and adolescents, the school environment may be challenging due to peer social ostracism and rejection. To date, information on the psychological functioning and the quality of peer relations in gender dysphoric children and adolescents has been studied via parental report, peer sociometric methods, and social interactions in laboratory play groups. The present study was the first cross-national investigation that assessed behavior and emotional problems and the quality of peer relations, both measured by the Teacher’s Report Form (TRF), in a sample of 728 gender dysphoric patients (554 children, 174 adolescents), who were referred to specialized gender identity clinics in the Netherlands and Canada. The gender dysphoric adolescents had significantly more teacher-reported emotional and behavioral problems than the gender dysphoric children. In both countries, gender dysphoric natal boys had poorer peer relations and more internalizing than externalizing problems compared to the gender dysphoric natal girls. Furthermore, there were significant between-clinic differences: both the children and the adolescents from Canada had more emotional and behavioral problems and a poorer quality of peer relations than the children and adolescents from the Netherlands. In conclusion, gender dysphoric children and adolescents showed the same pattern of emotional and behavioral problems in both countries. The extent of behavior and emotional problems was, however, higher in Canada than in the Netherlands, which appeared, in part, an effect of a poorer quality of peer relations. Per Bronfenbrenner’s (American Psychologist, 32, 513–531, 1977) ecological model of human development and well-being, we consider various interpretations of the cross-national, cross-clinic differences on TRF behavior problems at the level of the family, the peer group, and the culture at large.


Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders | 2015

Autism Spectrum Disorder Risk Factors and Autistic Traits in Gender Dysphoric Children

Doug P. VanderLaan; Jonathan H. Leef; Hayley Wood; S. Kathleen Hughes; Kenneth J. Zucker

Gender dysphoria (GD) and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are associated. In 49 GD children (40 natal males), we examined ASD risk factors (i.e., birth weight, parental age, sibling sex ratio) in relation to autistic traits. Data were gathered on autistic traits, birth weight, parents’ ages at birth, sibling sex ratio, gender nonconformity, age, maternal depression, general behavioral and emotional problems, and IQ. High birth weight was associated with both high gender nonconformity and autistic traits among GD children. Developmental processes associated with high birth weight are, therefore, likely to underlie the GD–ASD link either directly or indirectly. The present study is the first to provide quantitative data bearing on possible mechanisms that lead GD and ASD to co-occur.


Journal of Sex Research | 2015

Do Children With Gender Dysphoria Have Intense/Obsessional Interests?

Doug P. VanderLaan; Lori Postema; Hayley Wood; Devita Singh; Sophia Fantus; Jessica Hyun; Jonathan H. Leef; Susan J. Bradley; Kenneth J. Zucker

This study examined whether children clinically referred for gender dysphoria (GD) show increased symptoms of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Circumscribed preoccupations or intense interests were considered as overlapping symptoms expressed in GD and ASD. In gender-referred children (n = 534; 82.2% male) and their siblings (n = 419; 57.5% male), we examined Items 9 and 66 on the Child Behavior Checklist, which measure obsessions and compulsions, respectively. Non-GD clinic-referred (n = 1,201; 48.5% male) and nonreferred (n = 1,201; 48.5% male) children were also examined. Gender-referred children were elevated compared to all other groups for Item 9, and compared to siblings and nonreferred children for Item 66. A gender-related theme was significantly more common for gender-referred boys than male siblings on Item 9 only. A gender-related theme was not significantly more common for gender-referred girls compared to their female siblings on either item. The findings for Item 9 support the idea that children with GD show an elevation in obsessional interests. For gender-referred boys in particular, gender-related themes constituted more than half of the examples provided by their mothers. Intense/obsessional interests in children with GD may be one of the factors underlying the purported link between GD and ASD.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Birth Order and Sibling Sex Ratio of Children and Adolescents Referred to a Gender Identity Service

Doug P. VanderLaan; Ray Blanchard; Hayley Wood; Kenneth J. Zucker

In adult male samples, homosexuality is associated with a preponderance of older brothers (i.e., the fraternal birth order effect). In several studies comparing gender dysphoric youth, who are likely to be homosexual in adulthood, to clinical or non-clinical control groups, the findings have been consistent with the fraternal birth order effect in males; however, less is known about unique sibship characteristics of gender dysphoric females. The current study investigated birth order and sibling sex ratio in a large sample of children and adolescents referred to the same Gender Identity Service (N = 768). Probands were classified as heterosexual males, homosexual males, or homosexual females based on clinical diagnostic information. Groups differed significantly in age and sibship size, and homosexual females were significantly more likely to be only children. Subsequent analyses controlled for age and for sibship size. Compared to heterosexual males, homosexual males had a significant preponderance of older brothers and homosexual females had a significant preponderance of older sisters. Similarly, the older sibling sex ratio of homosexual males showed a significant excess of brothers whereas that of homosexual females showed a significant excess of sisters. Like previous studies of gender dysphoric youth and adults, these findings were consistent with the fraternal birth order effect. In addition, the greater frequency of only children and elevated numbers of older sisters among the homosexual female group adds to a small literature on sibship characteristics of potential relevance to the development of gender identity and sexual orientation in females.


Archive | 2014

Models of Psychopathology in Children and Adolescents with Gender Dysphoria

Kenneth J. Zucker; Hayley Wood; Doug P. VanderLaan

This chapter reviews empirical data on the extent to which children and adolescents with gender dysphoria show other types of psychopathology or behavior problems. It then reviews several models that have attempted to account for this psychopathology when it is present. Several factors have been reasonably established as accounting for at least some of the variance in general psychopathology, including peer social ostracism, cultural factors, and generic risk factors for psychopathology in the family. Surprisingly, little empirical attention has been given to the possibility that gender dysphoria is inherently distressing and thus is another source of the socioemotional problems that children and adolescents with this diagnosis experience.

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Doug P. VanderLaan

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

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Susan J. Bradley

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

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Allison Owen-Anderson

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

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Lori Wasserman

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

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Devita Singh

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

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Jonathan H. Leef

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

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S. Kathleen Hughes

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

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