Association of Cyberbullying Involvement With Subsequent Substance Use Among Adolescents.

IF 2 4区 农林科学 Q3 ECOLOGY
Compost Science & Utilization Pub Date : 2019-11-01 Epub Date: 2019-07-17 DOI:10.1016/j.jadohealth.2019.05.006
Yoewon Yoon, Jungeun Olivia Lee, Junhan Cho, Mariel S Bello, Rubin Khoddam, Nathaniel R Riggs, Adam M Leventhal
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose: Adolescent involvement in cyberbullying is common and involves several roles (witness, perpetrator, or victim). Whether different cyberbullying roles are differentially associated with substance use is unknown. The present study examined the associations of adolescent cyberbullying involvement with use and polyuse of various substances.

Methods: A longitudinal cohort of students in Los Angeles, California (N = 2,768) completed surveys at baseline (10th grade, 2014, mean age = 15.5 years) and 12-month follow-up (11th grade, 2015). Five mutually exclusive cyberbullying roles were identified at baseline-no involvement; witness only; witness and victim; witness and perpetrator; and witness, victim, and perpetrator. Past 6-month use of nine substances and poly-use of multiple substances were assessed at baseline and follow-up.

Results: Most students (52.2%) were involved in >1 cyberbullying roles. Relative to no involvement, all cyberbullying roles, including witnessing only, were associated with increased odds of using most substances and polysubstance use at follow-up, after adjusting for sociodemographics and baseline substance use (odds ratios: 1.44 [95% confidence interval: 1.18-1.76] to 5.24 [2.73-10.05]). Relative to the witness-only role, students involved in all three roles were at greater odds of using several substances at follow-up (odds ratios: 1.47 [95% confidence interval: 1.05-2.05] to 2.96 [1.60-5.50]).

Conclusions: Cyberbullying involvement, even witnessing, may be associated with future substance use in adolescence. All cyberbullying roles warrant consideration in understanding and preventing youth substance use.

参与网络欺凌与青少年随后使用药物的关系。
目的:青少年参与网络欺凌很常见,并涉及多种角色(目击者、施暴者或受害者)。不同的网络欺凌角色是否与药物使用有不同的关联尚不清楚。本研究探讨了青少年参与网络欺凌与使用和多次使用各种药物之间的关系:加利福尼亚州洛杉矶市的一组纵向学生(N = 2,768)在基线(2014 年 10 年级,平均年龄 = 15.5 岁)和 12 个月随访(2015 年 11 年级)期间完成了调查。基线调查确定了五种相互排斥的网络欺凌角色--未参与;仅为目击者;目击者和受害者;目击者和施暴者;目击者、受害者和施暴者。在基线和随访期间,对过去 6 个月使用 9 种药物和多次使用多种药物的情况进行了评估:结果:大多数学生(52.2%)都参与了一次以上的网络欺凌行为。与未参与网络欺凌相比,所有网络欺凌角色(包括仅目睹网络欺凌)都会增加学生在后续调查中使用大多数药物和多种药物的几率,这是在对社会人口统计学和基线药物使用情况进行调整后得出的结果(几率比:1.44 [95% 置信区间:1.18-1.76] 至 5.24 [2.73-10.05])。与只扮演证人角色的学生相比,扮演所有三种角色的学生在后续调查中使用多种药物的几率更大(几率比:1.47 [95% 置信区间:1.05-2.05] 至 2.96 [1.60-5.50]):结论:参与网络欺凌,甚至是目睹网络欺凌,可能与青少年未来使用药物有关。在了解和预防青少年使用药物方面,所有网络欺凌角色都值得考虑。
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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来源期刊
Compost Science & Utilization
Compost Science & Utilization 农林科学-生态学
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
>36 weeks
期刊介绍: 4 issues per year Compost Science & Utilization is currently abstracted/indexed in: CABI Agriculture & Environment Abstracts, CSA Biotechnology and Environmental Engineering Abstracts, EBSCOhost Abstracts, Elsevier Compendex and GEOBASE Abstracts, PubMed, ProQuest Science Abstracts, and Thomson Reuters Biological Abstracts and Science Citation Index
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