America
Childhood bullying may spike mental health issues by 3.5x: Study
New York, Feb 13
Children who experience bullying are likely to develop distrust and are 3.5 times more likely to experience clinically-significant mental health issues by age 17, according to a study.
The study, published in the journal Nature Mental Health, is believed to be the first to examine the link between peer bullying, interpersonal distrust, and the subsequent development of mental health problems, such as anxiety, depression, hyperactivity and anger.
For the study, researchers at the University of California-Los Angeles (UCLA) in the US and the University of Glasgow in the UK used data from 10,000 children in the UK.
They found that adolescents who were bullied at age 11 and in turn developed greater interpersonal distrust by age 14 were around 3.5 times more likely to experience clinically significant mental health problems at age 17 compared to those who developed less distrust.
The findings could help schools and other institutions to develop new evidence-based interventions to counter the negative mental health impacts of bullying, said Dr. George Slavich, who directs UCLA Health’s Laboratory for Stress Assessment and Research.
“There are few public health topics more important than youth mental health right now,” Slavich said.
“In order to help teenagers reach their fullest potential, we need to invest in research that identifies risk factors for poor health and that translates this knowledge into prevention programmes that can improve lifelong health and resilience,” he said.
Prior research has identified associations between bullying and mental and behavioural health issues among youth, including its impact on substance abuse, depression, anxiety, self-harm and suicidal thoughts.
However, following youth over time, this study is the first to confirm the suspected pathway of how bullying leads to distrust and, in turn, mental health problems in late adolescence.
Slavich said when people develop clinically significant mental health problems during the teenage years, it can increase their risk of experiencing both mental and physical health issues across the entire lifespan if left unaddressed.
In addition to interpersonal distrust, the team examined if diet, sleep or physical activity also linked peer bullying with subsequent mental health problems.
However, only interpersonal distrust was found to relate bullying to greater risk of experiencing mental health problems at age 17.
“What these data suggest is that we really need school-based programmes that help foster a sense of interpersonal trust at the level of the classroom and school,” Slavich said.
“One way to do that would be to develop evidence-based programmes that are especially focused on the transition to high school and college, and that frame school as an opportunity to develop close, long-lasting relationships,” he said.
15 hours ago
Jaahnavi Kandula case: Family learnt about compensation deal through social media
17 hours ago
Lieutenant Governor Aruna Miller Welcomes Monks on 'Walk for Peace' to Final Stop in Annapolis
17 hours ago
Rani Mukerji shares how social alertness can prevent crimes against women
18 hours ago
Subhash Ghai shares ‘Vidhaata’ was his first film with Dilip Kumar, Sanjeev Kumar & Shammi Kapoor
20 hours ago
Most white-collar jobs to be automated in 12-18 months: Microsoft AI Chief
20 hours ago
India restructures public health delivery by integrating AI into unified strategy
20 hours ago
Sasikumar, Chaithra J Achar along with 'My Lord' team offer prayers at Tiruvannamalai temple
20 hours ago
Dulquer Salmaan's 'Aakasamlo Oka Tara' in final phase, says Sujith Sarang
20 hours ago
Allu Arjun says he ‘missed being’ at brother Allu Sirish’s ‘Pasupu’ ceremony, feels the FOMO
20 hours ago
L K Akshay Kumar celebrates Sirai's 50 day-theatrical run on sets of Basil Joseph's 'Raawadi'
20 hours ago
Ameesha Patel revisits Boston memories, shares glimpse of ‘hated canteen’, dorm & auditorium
20 hours ago
Halle Berry says ‘Crime 101’ celebrates women who refuse to be diminished
20 hours ago
Kharge demands RS chairman to restore expunged remarks from speech on President’s address
