4.3 Article

Offline Victimization, Psychological Morbidity, and Problematic Online Behavior among Chinese Secondary School Students

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18189462

Keywords

victimization; depression; anxiety; Internet addiction; cyberbullying

Funding

  1. Research Grants Council General Research Fund-Early Career Scheme [25602119]
  2. University Grants Committee, Hong Kong
  3. Hong Kong Polytechnic University

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Despite the increase in child victimization, there has been limited research on the impact of psychological morbidity and problematic online behavior in a single study. This study found that victimization was positively associated with depression, anxiety, Internet addiction, and cyberbullying. Depression was found to mediate the relationship between victimization and both Internet addiction and cyberbullying, with a stronger effect for girls, while anxiety only mediated the relationship between victimization and Internet addiction in boys.
Despite the rise of child victimization in different societies, few researchers have examined its consequences in terms of psychological morbidity (such as depression and anxiety) and problematic online behavior (such as Internet addiction and cyberbullying) in a single study. Moreover, no study has investigated the role of psychological morbidity in mediating the impact of victimization on problematic online behavior (indexed by Internet addiction and cyberbullying) in a single model. Based on a survey of 2843 Chinese secondary students (49.3% male; Mage = 13.97) from six public secondary schools in Fujian, China, we found that experience of victimization was positively associated with depression and anxiety, as well as Internet addiction and cyberbullying. Depression mediated the links between victimization and both Internet addiction and cyberbullying, with the mediating effect on Internet addiction found to be stronger for girls. While anxiety did not mediate the association between victimization and cyberbullying, it mediated the relationship between victimization and Internet addiction in boys. These findings enrich our understanding of the negative outcomes of victimization, as well as directions for intervention.

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