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Journal Article

Citation

Bauman S, Toomey RB, Walker JL. J. Adolesc. 2013; 36(2): 341-350.

Affiliation

Counseling and Mental Health Program, Department of Disability and Psychoeducational Studies, University of Arizona, P.O. Box 210069, Tucson, AZ 85721-0069, USA. Electronic address: sherib@u.arizona.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.adolescence.2012.12.001

PMID

23332116

Abstract

This study examined associations among depression, suicidal behaviors, and bullying and victimization experiences in 1491 high school students using data from the 2009 Youth Risk Behavior Survey. Results demonstrated that depression mediated the association between bullying/victimization and suicide attempts, but differently for males and females. Specifically, depression mediated the link between traditional victimization and suicide attempts similarly across gender, whereas depression mediated the link between cyber victimization and suicide attempts only for females. Similarly, depression mediated the link between traditional bullying and suicide attempts for females only. Depression did not mediate the link between cyberbullying and suicide attempts for either gender. Implications of the findings are discussed, including the importance of greater detection of depression among students involved in bullying, and the need for a suicide prevention and intervention component in anti-bullying programs. Findings suggest that bullying prevention efforts be extended from middle school students to include high school students.


Language: en

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