| Literature DB >> 20221691 |
Christina Stadler1, Julia Feifel, Sonja Rohrmann, Robert Vermeiren, Fritz Poustka.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate the frequency and effects of peer-victimization on mental health problems among adolescents. Parental and school support were assumed as protective factors that might interact with one another in acting as buffers for adolescents against the risk of peer-victimization. Besides these protective factors, age and gender were additionally considered as moderating factors. The Social and Health Assessment survey was conducted among 986 students aged 11-18 years in order to assess peer-victimization, risk and protective factors and mental health problems. For mental health problems, the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) was used. Effects of peer-victimization on mental health problems were additionally compared with normative SDQ data in order to obtain information about clinically relevant psychopathology in our study sample. Results of this study show that peer-victimization carries a serious risk for mental health problems in adolescents. School support is effective in both male and female adolescents by acting as a buffer against the effect of victimization, and school support gains increasing importance in more senior students. Parental support seems to be protective against maladjustment, especially in peer-victimized girls entering secondary school. Since the effect of peer-victimization can be reduced by parental and school support, educational interventions are of great importance in cases of peer-victimization.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20221691 PMCID: PMC2861171 DOI: 10.1007/s10578-010-0174-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Psychiatry Hum Dev ISSN: 0009-398X
Demographic characteristics of the study sample
| Variable | Total sample ( | Girls ( | Boys ( | Statistic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age mean |
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| School form | ||||
| Comprehensive school | 46.3% | 24.0% | 22.3% |
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| Secondary grammar school | 15.3% | 7.2% | 8.1% | |
| Intermediate secondary school | 21.9% | 11.6% | 10.3% | |
| Grammar school | 16.5% | 9.4% | 7.1% | |
| Migration background | 55.6% | 52.6% | 47.4% |
|
| Parents | ||||
| Married or remarried | 70.0% | 37.6% | 32.4% |
|
| Divorced or separated | 20.7% | 9.7% | 11.0% | |
| Widowed | 2.5% | 1.3% | 1.2% | |
| Never married | 6.8% | 3.5% | 3.3% | |
| Fathers’s unemployment | 14.9% | 7.8% | 7.1% |
|
Correlations among the measured variables for girls (italic and bold) and boys (below diagonal)
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Peer-victimization | – | − | − |
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| 2. School support | −.19** | – |
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| 3. Parent support | −.08 | .30** |
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| 4. Psychosocial risk | .15** | −.10* | −.11 | – |
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| 5. Total SDQ | .41** | −.32** | −.30** | .14** | – |
* p < .05; ** p < .01
Predictors on mental health problems in male and female adolescents
| Mental health problems (SDQ total score) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| B at entry | SE B | β | ||
| Psychosocial risk | Block 1 | .21 | .15 | .04 |
| Victimization | 1.95 | .16 | .36** | |
| Parent support | −.43 | .15 | −.08* | |
| School support | −1.46 | .16 | −.27** | |
| Gender | −2.02 | .30 | −.19** | |
| Victimization × parent support | Block 2 | −.39 | .16 | −.07* |
| Victimization × school support | .00 | .15 | .00 | |
| School support × parent support | −.14 | .15 | −.03 | |
| Victimization × gender | −.69 | .32 | −.10* | |
| Parent support × gender | .47 | −.30 | .07 | |
| School support × gender | −.29 | .32 | −.04 | |
| Victimization × parent support × gender | Block 3 | .78 | .35 |
|
| Victimization × school support × gender | −.48 | .32 | −.07 | |
| Parent support × school support × gender | −.08 | .31 | .01 | |
| Victimization × parent support × school support | −.03 | .15 | −.01 | |
R2 = .28 for step 1 (p < .01); ΔR2 = .005 for step 2 (p = .058); ΔR2 = .01 for step 3 (p = .18), * p < .05, ** p < .01
Predictors on mental health problems in 11–14 and 15–18 year old Adolescents
| Mental health problems (SDQ total score) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| B at entry | SE B | β | ||
| Psychosocial risk | Block 1 | .16 | .16 | .03 |
| Victimization | 1.75 | .16 | .32** | |
| Parent support | −.24 | .16 | −.05 | |
| School support | −1.62 | .16 | −.30** | |
| Age | .81 | .32 | −.08* | |
| Victimization × parent support | Block 2 | −.23 | .17 | −.04 |
| Victimization × school support | −.09 | .16 | .02 | |
| School support × parent support | −.12 | .16 | −.02 | |
| Victimization × age | −.09 | .26 | −.01 | |
| Parent support × age | .50 | .34 | −.05 | |
| School support × age | −.20 | .32 | −.02 | |
| Victimization × parent support × age | Block 3 | −.79 | .36 | − |
| Victimization × school support × age | −.96 | .26 | − | |
| Parent support × school support × age | −.03 | .43 | −.00 | |
| Victimization × parent support × school support | −.05 | .16 | −.01 | |
R2 = .26 for step 1 (p < .01); ΔR2 = .01 for step 2 (p = .43); ΔR2 = .01 for step 3 (p = .01), * p < .05, ** p < .01
Fig. 1Level of mental health problems (SDQ total score) in victimized and nonvictimized middle-school students and senior students with high school support (N = 76) and low school support (N = 115)
Fig. 2Level of mental health problems (SDQ total score) in non-victimized middle-school students and senior students with high school support (N = 425) and low school support (N = 358)
Fig. 3Level of mental health problems (SDQ total score) in peer-victimized male middle-school students and female middle-school students with high parent support (N = 53) and low parent support (N = 48)
Fig. 4Level of mental health problems (SDQ total score) in peer-victimized male senior students and female senior students with high parent support (N = 30) and low parent support (N = 62)
Fig. 5Level of mental health problems (SDQ total score) in non-victimized male middle-school students and female middle-school students with high parent support (N = 211) and low parent support (N = 142)
Fig. 6Level of mental health problems (SDQ total score) in non-victimized male senior students and female senior students with high parent support (N = 194) and low parent support (N = 236)