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Bullied kids at high risk of mental health issues including suicidal thoughts

Severe peer victimisation may contribute to the development of mental health problems in adolescence.

Edited by: India TV Lifestyle Desk New Delhi Updated on: January 15, 2018 16:14 IST
A representational image (PC: Google image)
A representational image (PC: Google image)

A new study has found that children who are bullied often are at high risk of suffering from mental health issues, including suicidal thoughts and anxiety behaviour in their teenage years.

The findings showed that children who experienced severe peer victimisation were more than twice as likely to report depression or low moods at age 15, and three times more likely to report anxiety. This group of children were also 3.5 times more likely to report serious suicidal thoughts or attempt suicide.

"Our findings showed a general tendency, in about 15 per cent of the children, of being exposed to the most severe levels of victimisation from the beginning of their education until the transition to high school," said Marie-Claude Geoffroy, from the McGill University in Canada. 

"Those children were at greater risk of debilitating depressive/dysthymic symptoms or anxiety and of suicidality in adolescence than less severely victimised children, even after we accounted for a plethora of confounders assessed throughout childhood," Geoffroy added.

For the study, detailed in the journal CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal), the team looked at 1,363 children who were followed until the age of 15 years. About 59 per cent of participants had experienced some peer victimisation in the first years of elementary school, although it generally declined as the children grew older.

"Although peer victimisation starts to decrease by the end of childhood, individuals in the severe trajectory group were still being exposed to the highest level of victimisation in early adolescence," Geoffroy noted. Severe peer victimisation may contribute to the development of mental health problems in adolescence, thus, it is important to prevent victimisation early in the lifespan, the results suggest.

(With IANS inputs)

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