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Bullying Victimization among Mexican Adolescents: Psychosocial Differences from an Ecological Approach.

Silvana Mabel Nuñez-FaddaRemberto Castro-CastañedaEsperanza Vargas-JiménezGonzalo Musitu-OchoaJuan Evaristo Callejas Jerónimo
Published in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2020)
This transversal study over a random representative sample of 1687 Mexican students attending public and private secondary schools (54% girls, 12-17 years old, M = 13.65. DT = 1.14) aimed to analyze psychosocial differences between victims and non-victims of bullying from the bioecological model. It included individual variables (ontosystem), familiar, community, and scholar factors (microsystem), and gender (macrosystem) to perform a multivariate discriminant analysis and a logistic regression analysis. The discriminant analysis found that psychological distress, offensive communication with mother and father, and a positive attitude toward social norms transgression characterized the high victimization cluster. For the non-victims, the discriminant variables were community implication, positive attitude toward institutional authority, and open communication with the mother. These variables allowed for correctly predicting membership in 76% of the cases. Logistic regression analysis found that psychological distress, offensive communication with the father, and being a boy increased the probability of high victimization, while a positive attitude toward authority, open communication with the mother, and being a girl decrease this probability. These results highlight the importance of open and offensive communication between adolescents and their parents on psychological distress, attitude toward authority, community implication, and bullying victimization.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • intimate partner violence
  • high school
  • young adults
  • minimally invasive
  • physical activity
  • sleep quality
  • data analysis