Relationships Among Childhood Bullying, Academic Satisfaction, and Mental Health Outcomes in Adults with Disabilities.

IF 2.9 Q2 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
Bryan R Christ, Bani Malhotra, Ghizlane Moustaid, Olivia Chapman, Paul B Perrin
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Abstract

Purpose/objective: Children with disabilities are at a greater risk of being bullied and experience mental health and academic problems that may persist in adulthood. This study examined the association of childhood bullying experiences with current mental health (anxiety and depression) among adults with disabilities, and whether academic satisfaction mediated the relationship between childhood bullying and adult mental health outcomes.

Research method/design: A sample of 409 adult participants with disabilities who had had their disabilities while attending school, and currently, completed an online survey assessing bullying experiences (California Bullying Victimization Scale-Retrospective), academic satisfaction (Academic Satisfaction Scale), depression (Patient Health Questionnaire-9), and anxiety (Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7). Bivariate correlations and two mediation analyses were conducted to identify the direct and indirect effects of school bullying experiences on current mental health outcomes, via academic satisfaction.

Results: Participants reported a moderate amount of childhood bullying and relatively high levels of depression and anxiety symptomology (with averages close to or exceeding clinical cutoffs of 10). Bivariate correlations among the four variables were all significantly moderately or strongly correlated. Bullying and academic satisfaction had direct associations with depression and anxiety. Academic satisfaction partially mediated the relationships between bullying and both mental health outcomes.

Conclusions/implications: Bullying prevention interventions and programs, especially geared toward preventing bullying in students with disabilities, are critical to stop the likely long-term impacts of bullying on mental health outcomes in disabled communities.

残疾成人儿童欺凌、学业满意度和心理健康结果的关系
目的/目标:残疾儿童遭受欺凌的风险更大,并面临可能在成年后持续存在的心理健康和学业问题。本研究探讨了儿童欺凌经历与残疾成年人当前心理健康(焦虑和抑郁)的关系,以及学业满意度是否介导了儿童欺凌与成人心理健康结果之间的关系。研究方法/设计:选取409名在校期间患有残疾的成年残疾参与者,完成了一项在线调查,评估欺凌经历(加州欺凌受害量表-回顾性)、学业满意度(学业满意度量表)、抑郁(患者健康问卷-9)和焦虑(广广性焦虑症-7)。进行了双变量相关性和两个中介分析,以确定学校欺凌经历对当前心理健康结果的直接和间接影响,通过学业满意度。结果:参与者报告了适度的童年欺凌和相对较高水平的抑郁和焦虑症状(平均接近或超过临床临界值10)。四个变量之间的双变量相关性均为显著的中相关或强相关。欺凌和学业满意度与抑郁和焦虑有直接联系。学业满意度在霸凌与两种心理健康结果的关系中起到部分中介作用。结论/启示:欺凌预防干预措施和项目,特别是针对残疾学生的欺凌预防,对于阻止欺凌对残疾社区心理健康结果可能产生的长期影响至关重要。
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CiteScore
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