4.7 Article

Moderation Effects of Positive Core Belief and Social-Emotional Responsiveness on the Relationship Between Cyberbullying Victimization and Affective Symptoms

Journal

PSYCHOLOGY RESEARCH AND BEHAVIOR MANAGEMENT
Volume 16, Issue -, Pages 2545-2551

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/PRBM.S420771

Keywords

depression; anxiety; irritability; online bullying; medical students

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Medical students are vulnerable to cyberbullying, which can increase stress and lead to affective disorders. The moderating factors of this stressor in the Thai context have been understudied. An analysis of an annual survey on the mental health and stressors of medical students in 2021 revealed the effects of cyberbullying victimization, psychosocial stressors, and self-reported resilience measures on affective symptoms.
Introduction: Medical students are a vulnerable population. Exposure to cyberbullying can aggravate stress and lead to affective disorders. Features that moderate the influence of this stressor have been under-studied in Thai context.Materials and Methods: An annual survey on the mental health and stressors of medical students from 2021 was analyzed. Measures on cyberbullying victimization, psychosocial stressors, self-reported resilience measures (problem solving, positive core belief, social emotional responsiveness, and perseverance), and other covariates were assessed for their effects on affective symptoms using linear regression. Interaction analyses were then performed. Results: A total of 303 cyberbullied respondents were included. In a linear regression model controlled for cyberbullying victimiza-tion score, perceived psychosocial difficulties, age, and academic year, positive core belief significantly predicted lower affective symptoms, while social-emotional responsiveness showed a trend toward predicting lower affective symptoms. Trend toward negative interaction was found for positive core belief, whereas an opposite trend was found for social-emotional responsiveness. Implications in the context of medical schools are also discussed.Discussion: Positive core belief appears to be a resilience feature toward cyberbullying victimization in the studied population. Its effects were discussed from the perspective of cognitive-behavioral therapy. In the context of medical school, the belief could be fostered by creating a safe learning environment with readily available guidance. Social-emotional responsiveness is a protective factor toward cyberbullying victimization, although its trend toward negative interaction with cyberbullying victimization implies that this feature's protective effect declines as intensity of the bullying increases. Conclusion: Positive core belief is a potential resilience feature of cyberbullying victimization. On the other hand, the protective effect of social-emotional responsiveness appeared to decline with greater intensity of cyberbullying.

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