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Journal Article

Citation

van Geel M, Vedder P, Tanilon J. JAMA Pediatr. 2014; 168(8): 714-720.

Affiliation

Hotelschool The Hague, Den Haag, the Netherlands.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, American Medical Association)

DOI

10.1001/jamapediatrics.2014.213

PMID

24912011

Abstract

IMPORTANCE Studies suggest that adolescents involved in bullying are more likely to carry weapons than their uninvolved peers.

OBJECTIVE To use meta-analyses to determine whether victims, bullies, and bully-victims are more likely to carry weapons than uninvolved peers. DATA SOURCES PsycINFO, ERIC, MEDLINE, LILACS, EMBASE, and Dissertation Abstracts International were searched for relevant publications (1950 through January 2014). The reference list of a review article and reference lists of retrieved articles were checked for further relevant studies. STUDY SELECTION Studies were included if they provided an effect size comparing the weapon carrying of adolescent victims, bullies, or bully-victims with that of uninvolved peers. Studies that included individuals older than 21 years were excluded, as were studies that focused on incarcerated youth or youth diagnosed as having a psychopathologic condition. DATA EXTRACTION AND SYNTHESIS Studies were coded independently by 2 of us. The agreement rate was 93%. Effect sizes were coded that compared victims, bullies, or bully-victims with uninvolved peers. Meta-analyses were based on 22 studies for victims (n = 257 179), 15 studies for bullies (n = 236 145), and 8 studies for bully-victims (n = 199 563). MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES This study focused on weapon carrying among adolescents. Hypotheses were formulated before the study.

RESULTS Victims (odds ratio [OR], 1.97; 95% CI, 1.62-2.39), bullies (OR, 3.25; 95% CI, 2.72-3.89), and bully-victims (OR, 4.95; 95% CI, 3.77-6.50) were more likely to carry weapons than uninvolved peers. Analyses provided no indication of publication bias. Studies conducted in the United States found stronger relations between being a bully-victim and weapon carrying (OR, 7.84; 95% CI, 6.02-10.21) than studies from other countries (OR, 3.62; 95% CI, 2.30-5.68; Q1 = 8.401; P = .004).

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Involvement in bullying as a victim, bully, or bully-victim is related to weapon carrying.


Language: en

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