Social support and mental health outcomes in palestinian children victims of bullying and cyberbullying during the covid-19 pandemic: an exploratory investigation.

Guido Veronese, Shahd Mansour, Fayez Mahamid, Dana Bdier
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Abstract

Background: Studies have shown that COVID-19 negatively impacted mental health by increasing depression and anxiety. Additionally, bullying might deteriorate children's psychological functioning. Nevertheless, social support has been studied as a positive buffer for mental well-being.

Objectives: Thus, our study aimed to examine the consequences of the COVID-19 outbreak on children's mental health when they are a victim of bullying and cyberbullying. Moreover, we tested the effect of social support as a mediating variable. A sample of 141 children (63 boys and 78 girls) 9 to 13 years old (M = 10.31, SD = 2.26) who reported having experienced bullying participated in the research. All were Palestinians living in Israel, attending primary schools.

Methods: Data was collected using the following measures, the Multidimensional Bullying Victimization Scale (MBVS), the Adolescents Cyber-Victimization Scale (CYBVICS), the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ), a questionnaire measuring the effect of COVID-19 on mental health outcomes, the Revised Child Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS), and the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support (MSPSS). Structural equation modelling was applied to test the association between variables and mediating effects.

Findings: A positive correlation between Fear of COVID-19 and traditional bullying, cyberbullying, depression, and anxiety were found. Moreover, social support was negatively correlated with traditional forms of bullying and cyberbullying. Also, statistically significant differences between traditional bullying, cyberbullying, depression, and parents' difficulties emerged from parental marital status.

Conclusions: findings might help victims of bullying by training teachers and guiding parents to construct intervention plans to empower the social networks of children victims.

在科维德-19 大流行病期间,遭受欺凌和网络欺凌的巴勒斯坦儿童的社会支持和心理健康结果:一项探索性调查。
背景:研究表明,COVID-19 会增加抑郁和焦虑,从而对心理健康产生负面影响。此外,欺凌行为可能会恶化儿童的心理功能。然而,有研究表明,社会支持对心理健康有积极的缓冲作用:因此,我们的研究旨在探讨 COVID-19 的爆发对遭受欺凌和网络欺凌的儿童心理健康的影响。此外,我们还测试了社会支持作为中介变量的效果。参与研究的样本包括 141 名 9 至 13 岁的儿童(63 名男孩和 78 名女孩)(M = 10.31,SD = 2.26),他们均表示曾遭受过欺凌。他们都是居住在以色列的巴勒斯坦人,在小学就读:采用以下方法收集数据:多维欺凌受害量表(MBVS)、青少年网络受害量表(CYBVICS)、优势与困难问卷(SDQ)、测量 COVID-19 对心理健康结果影响的问卷、修订版儿童焦虑和抑郁量表(RCADS)以及感知社会支持多维量表(MSPSS)。采用结构方程模型检验变量之间的关联和中介效应:结果:COVID-19恐惧与传统欺凌、网络欺凌、抑郁和焦虑之间存在正相关。此外,社会支持与传统形式的欺凌和网络欺凌呈负相关。此外,父母的婚姻状况在传统欺凌、网络欺凌、抑郁和父母的困难之间也存在统计学意义上的显著差异。结论:研究结果可以通过培训教师和指导父母制定干预计划,增强受害儿童社交网络的能力,从而帮助欺凌的受害者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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