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Bullying in school and cyberspace: Associations with depressive symptoms in Swiss and Australian adolescents
by
Cross, Donna
, Shaw, Thérèse
, Dooley, Julian
, Perren, Sonja
in
Bullying
/ Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
/ Children & youth
/ Clinical Psychology
/ Cyberbullying
/ Demographic aspects
/ Depression, Mental
/ Forensic Psychiatry
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mental depression
/ Pediatrics
/ Psychiatry
/ Psychological aspects
/ Risk factors
/ Studies
/ Teenagers
/ Youth
2010
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Bullying in school and cyberspace: Associations with depressive symptoms in Swiss and Australian adolescents
by
Cross, Donna
, Shaw, Thérèse
, Dooley, Julian
, Perren, Sonja
in
Bullying
/ Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
/ Children & youth
/ Clinical Psychology
/ Cyberbullying
/ Demographic aspects
/ Depression, Mental
/ Forensic Psychiatry
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mental depression
/ Pediatrics
/ Psychiatry
/ Psychological aspects
/ Risk factors
/ Studies
/ Teenagers
/ Youth
2010
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Bullying in school and cyberspace: Associations with depressive symptoms in Swiss and Australian adolescents
by
Cross, Donna
, Shaw, Thérèse
, Dooley, Julian
, Perren, Sonja
in
Bullying
/ Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
/ Children & youth
/ Clinical Psychology
/ Cyberbullying
/ Demographic aspects
/ Depression, Mental
/ Forensic Psychiatry
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mental depression
/ Pediatrics
/ Psychiatry
/ Psychological aspects
/ Risk factors
/ Studies
/ Teenagers
/ Youth
2010
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Bullying in school and cyberspace: Associations with depressive symptoms in Swiss and Australian adolescents
Journal Article
Bullying in school and cyberspace: Associations with depressive symptoms in Swiss and Australian adolescents
2010
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Overview
Background
Cyber-bullying (i.e., bullying via electronic means) has emerged as a new form of bullying that presents unique challenges to those victimised. Recent studies have demonstrated that there is a significant conceptual and practical overlap between both types of bullying such that most young people who are cyber-bullied also tend to be bullied by more traditional methods. Despite the overlap between traditional and cyber forms of bullying, it remains unclear if being a victim of cyber-bullying has the same negative consequences as being a victim of traditional bullying.
Method
The current study investigated associations between cyber versus traditional bullying and depressive symptoms in 374 and 1320 students from Switzerland and Australia respectively (52% female; Age: M = 13.8, SD = 1.0). All participants completed a bullying questionnaire (assessing perpetration and victimisation of traditional and cyber forms of bullying behaviour) in addition to scales on depressive symptoms.
Results
Across both samples, traditional victims and bully-victims reported more depressive symptoms than bullies and non-involved children. Importantly, victims of cyber-bullying reported significantly higher levels of depressive symptoms, even when controlling for the involvement in traditional bullying/victimisation.
Conclusions
Overall, cyber-victimisation emerged as an additional risk factor for depressive symptoms in adolescents involved in bullying.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
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