[Bullying as health hazard among school children].

E P Due, B E Holstein, P S Jørgensen
Author Information
  1. E P Due: Københavns Universitet, Institut for Folkesundhedsvidenskab.

Abstract

The objective was to analyse bullying in relation to sociodemographic factors, health, well-being, and health behaviours. The study is the 1998 Danish contribution to the international WHO-coordinated study Health Behaviour in School-aged Children. It includes 5,205 11-15 year-old students from a random sample of 55 schools who answered a standardized questionnaire. Twenty-five percent were bullied several times during the academic year, most frequently among the youngest students, and independent of sex; 32% bullied others, boys more frequently than girls; the frequency increased with age. Bullying was associated with low social class. Bullying varied considerably among schools. The victims had more problems as regards health, well-being and self-esteem; they smoked and drank less than others. Those who bullied others also had more problems but to a much smaller extent than the victims. They had higher levels of risk behaviours such as smoking, drinking, and seat-belt avoidance, and were less satisfied with school. In conclusion, victims of bullying have a very high proportion of health problems, poor well-being and low self-esteem. To bully others is significantly associated with health risk behaviours.

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Aggression
Child
Denmark
Female
Health Behavior
Humans
Life Style
Male
Psychology, Adolescent
Psychology, Child
Risk Factors
School Health Services
Self Concept
Social Behavior
Social Class
Surveys and Questionnaires

Word Cloud

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