4.3 Article

Bullying Victimization, Coping Strategies, and Depression of Children of China

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE
Volume 37, Issue 1-2, Pages 195-220

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0886260520907361

Keywords

bullying victimization; coping strategy; depression; children; China

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education (MOE), China [16YJC840003, 19YJC840049]
  2. self-determined research fund of Central China Normal University (CCNU) from the colleges' basic research and operation of MOE [CCNU19TD005]

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It is found that bullying victimization significantly affects children's psychological well-being, and different coping strategies have different effects on depression levels. Help-seeking strategy is more effective in reducing depression, while self-defense strategy can mitigate its impact. Furthermore, there is no single best coping strategy, as its effectiveness depends on the level of bullying victimization, and children may not be able to overcome the negative consequences of bullying on their own without external support.
It is common knowledge that bullying victimization and coping strategies significantly affect the psychological well-being of children. However, which coping strategies are more effective at a particular level of bullying victimization is underexplored. Using survey data from 1,634 children from 10 schools in Wuhan, China, this study aims to investigate the abovementioned research gap. The results of factor analysis suggest that coping strategies of children in China can be divided into three types: help-seeking, avoidance, and self-defense. The results of multilevel modeling suggest that children adopting different coping strategies have distinct levels of depression. Help seekers show a significantly lower level of depression than self-defenders and avoiders. However, with increased bullying victimization, the effectiveness of the help-seeking strategy gradually decreases to offset the negative effect of bullying victimization on psychological well-being. Instead, those who adopt the self-defense strategy display a lower level of depression. The findings of this study suggest that there is no single coping strategy that is best for children, and the more effective strategy largely relies on the level of bullying victimization. The findings also imply that without external support, it is almost impossible for children to completely overcome the negative consequences of bullying on their own.

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