School Bullying, Bystander Behavior, and Mental Health among Adolescents: The Mediating Roles of Self-Efficacy and Coping Styles

Author:

Wang Xu1ORCID,Shi Leiyu1,Ding Yunzhi2,Liu Bowen2,Chen Hongbao34,Zhou Wei34,Yu Renjie34,Zhang Peiyun34,Huang Xin2,Yang Yong34ORCID,Wu Zhijun2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA

2. Vanke School of Public Health, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China

3. Suzhou Guangji Hospital, Suzhou 215137, China

4. Affiliated Guangji Hospital of Soochow University, Suzhou 215137, China

Abstract

While numerous studies have revealed the impact of different bullying behaviors, such as victimization and perpetration, on the psychological development of adolescents, the exploration of the correlates of positive/negative bystander behaviors and their potential underlying mechanisms remains scarce in China. The present study aims to compare the relationships between mental health and positive versus negative bystander behavior and to clarify whether self-efficacy and coping styles mediate the relationships between mental health and bullying dynamics. The current study was conducted on 11,734 students from 18 secondary schools in Suzhou, China (Meanage = 15.00, SDage = 1.47; 53.8% boys). The information on bullying victimization, perpetration, positive/negative bystander behaviors, as well as self-efficacy, coping styles and mental health variables (including depression, anxiety, sleep disturbance, suicide risk), were collected. Negative bystander behavior was positively associated with mental health problems, while positive bystander behavior was negatively associated with these factors. Also, further analysis showed that coping styles and self-efficacy mediated the relationship between different bullying behaviors and mental health outcomes. The results highlighted the comparison of the correlates of positive and negative bystander behaviors, which were comparably crucial to those of victims and perpetrators for prevention and intervention efforts. Promoting adaptive coping styles and self-efficacy to buffer the deleterious psychological consequences of bullying behavior in adolescents was also important.

Funder

Suzhou Key Diagnosis and Treatment Program

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference87 articles.

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2. United Nations Children’s Fund (2021). The State of the World’s Children 2021: On My Mind—Promoting, Protecting and Caring for Children’s Mental Health, UNICEF.

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4. Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis: Depressive Symptoms and Risky Behaviors among Adolescents in Low-and Middle-Income Countries;Pozuelo;J. Am. Acad. Child Adolesc. Psychiatry,2022

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