The roles of dating and victimization on adverse mental health among teens: Survey findings during the COVID-19 pandemic.

IF 3 2区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL Journal of Adolescence Pub Date : 2024-07-08 DOI:10.1002/jad.12370
Shih-Ying Cheng, Lara B Gerassi
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Abstract

Introduction: The relationship between romantic involvement, dating violence, other victimizations, and mental health among adolescents in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic is understudied.

Methods: This study analyzed 2021 survey data collected from a representative sample of 9th-12th grade students (n = 10,792) from 24 high schools in a US Midwestern state. Most respondents identified as White, heterosexual, and US-born, with more than three-quarters aged 15-17 years. Guided by the poly-victimization framework, this study explored: (a) How do youth victimizations and mental health concerns differ by their experience of dating and dating violence? (b) What are the associations between youth mental health concerns, victimizations, and dating?

Results: Youths reported mental health concerns and victimizations at considerable rates during the COVID-19 pandemic when in-person interactions were limited. Those who experienced dating violence were at a higher risk of reporting other victimizations (i.e., unwanted sexual comments, unwanted sexual contact, sexual photos/videos, sex trading for compensation, discrimination, and bullying). The number of victimizations demonstrated a cumulative effect on teen mental health. Most individual victimizations showed significant net associations with mental health concerns, even when controlling for other differing victimizations.

Conclusions: Dating violence plays a critical role in the interconnectedness of victimizations, and the number of victimizations has a cumulative effect on teen mental health. The high prevalence of youth victimizations during the time when in-person interactions were limited suggests that victimizations may transfer from in-person forms to virtual forms and occur offline. Implications for individual and community prevention and interventions are discussed.

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约会和受害对青少年不良心理健康的影响:COVID-19 大流行期间的调查结果。
导言:在 COVID-19 大流行的背景下,青少年恋爱、约会暴力、其他受害行为和心理健康之间的关系还未得到充分研究:本研究分析了从美国中西部某州 24 所高中的 9-12 年级学生(n = 10,792 人)中收集的 2021 份调查数据。大多数受访者认为自己是白人、异性恋、在美国出生,超过四分之三的受访者年龄在 15-17 岁之间。在多重受害框架的指导下,本研究探讨了:(a) 青少年的受害情况和心理健康问题在约会和约会暴力经历方面有何不同?(b) 青少年心理健康问题、受害情况和约会之间有哪些关联?在 COVID-19 大流行期间,当人际交往受到限制时,青少年报告心理健康问题和受害情况的比例相当高。经历过约会暴力的青少年报告其他受害行为(即不受欢迎的性评论、不受欢迎的性接触、性照片/视频、以性交易为目的的补偿、歧视和欺凌)的风险更高。受害次数对青少年心理健康的影响是累积性的。即使控制了其他不同的受害情况,大多数个人受害情况仍与心理健康问题有明显的净关联:结论:约会暴力在受害事件的相互关联中扮演着重要角色,受害事件的数量对青少年的心理健康具有累积效应。在人际交往有限的情况下,青少年受害率很高,这表明受害行为可能会从人际交往形式转移到虚拟形式,并在线下发生。本文讨论了个人和社区预防和干预措施的意义。
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来源期刊
Journal of Adolescence
Journal of Adolescence PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL-
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
2.60%
发文量
123
期刊介绍: The Journal of Adolescence is an international, broad based, cross-disciplinary journal that addresses issues of professional and academic importance concerning development between puberty and the attainment of adult status within society. It provides a forum for all who are concerned with the nature of adolescence, whether involved in teaching, research, guidance, counseling, treatment, or other services. The aim of the journal is to encourage research and foster good practice through publishing both empirical and clinical studies as well as integrative reviews and theoretical advances.
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