Literature DB >> 25054256

Bullying in Brazilian school children: analysis of the National Adolescent School-based Health Survey (PeNSE 2012).

Deborah Carvalho Malta1, Denise Lopes Porto1, Claudio Dutra Crespo2, Marta Maria Alves Silva1, Silvania Suely Caribé de Andrade1, Flavia Carvalho Malta de Mello3, Rosane Monteiro4, Marta Angélica Iossi Silva3.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the victimization and bullying practice in Brazilian school children, according to data from the National Adolescent School-based Health Survey and to compare the surveys from 2009 and 2012.
METHODS: This is a cross-sectional study with univariate and multivariate analyzes of the following variables: to have been treated badly by colleagues, to have been bullied and to have bullied other children. The following independent variables were analyzed: age, sex, race/color, type of school, maternal education. Prevalence rates were compared between the editions of 2009 and 2012 of the survey.
RESULTS: Of all the adolescents analyzed, 27.5% have not been treated well by peers at school, with greater frequency among boys (OR = 1.50), at the age of 15 years (OR = 1.29) and 16 (OR = 1.41), public school students (OR = 2.08), black (OR = 1.18) and whose mothers had less education; 7.2% reported having been bullied, with a greater chance in younger students (13 years old), male (OR = 1.26), black (OR = 1.15) and indigenous (OR = 1.16) and whose mothers had less education; 20.8% reported to have bullied other children, with a greater chance for older students, at the age of 14 (OR = 1.08) and 15 years (OR = 1.18), male (OR = 1.87), black (OR = 1.14) and yellow (OR = 1.15), children of mothers with higher education, private school students. There was an increase of bullying in the Brazilian capitals, from 5.4 to 6.8%, between 2009 and 2012. DISCUSSION: The occurrence of bullying reveals that the Brazilian school context is also becoming a space of reproduction of violence, in which it is crucial to act intersectorally and to articulate social protection networks, aiming to face this issue.

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Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25054256     DOI: 10.1590/1809-4503201400050008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rev Bras Epidemiol        ISSN: 1415-790X


  10 in total

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  10 in total

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