The phrase being bullied has been around for a long time and with it there are consequences for those who experience at a young age a recent study suggests.
According to a new study, Among nearly 4,000 children in southwest England were followed from birth, kids who were frequently bullied at age 13 were more than twice as likely to be depressed at age 18 as those who were not bullied, even after accounting for other factors that could contribute to depression risk.
"Given what we already know about bullying and other adverse health outcomes, we had anticipated that we would find a link between peer victimization in the teenage years and clinical depression," said lead author Lucy Bowes of the experimental psychology department at the University of Oxford in the U.K.
"What was surprising was the proportion of depression that might be explained by peer victimization if this really is a causal relationship - nearly 30% in our sample," Bowes told Reuters Health by email.
The researchers used data on some 3,700 families from a long-term study. Nearly 7,000 kids reported on their experience of bullying at age 13, when they were asked whether and how often they had experienced peer victimization, like exclusion, rumor spreading or physical violence, over the previous six months.
Of the participants who had data at both time points, 683 said they had "frequently" been the victim of bullying at age 13. Almost 15% of this group was depressed, according to clinical criteria, at age 18, the study team reported June 2 in the BMJ.
Of the 1,446 children who said they were victimized "sometimes" at age 13, 7% were depressed at age 18. The largest group, 1,769 kids who said they had not been bullied, had the lowest rates of depression, with less than 6% meeting clinical criteria at age 18.
The researchers had complete data for 2,668 kids about family and personal factors, like past behavior problems and baseline depression levels, and adjusted their analysis for those other possible contributors to depression risk.
If bullying does cause depression, they speculate, the analysis shows that it could be responsible for 29% of depression at age 18.
"There is likely a vicious circle occurring - children more at risk of depression are also more likely to be bullied by their peers, which makes it even more likely that they might go on to develop depression as an adult," Bowes said. "But even when we control for previous depressive symptoms as well as a number of other factors relating to the individual, their family circumstances and stressful life experiences, we still observed an increased risk of depression those bullied in childhood."
"Clinicians treating adolescents presenting with depression may wish to enquire about experiences of peer victimization," especially if the bullying may be ongoing, she said.
"Given the cross national consistency in the relation between bullying behaviours and psychosocial adjustment, Bowes and colleagues' work offers clear antibullying messages that should be endorsed by parents, school authorities, and practitioners internationally," Maria M. Ttofi, a lecturer in psychological criminology at the University of Cambridge, wrote in a linked editorial.
Parents and teachers should note that many teens do not report their bullying experiences and should proactively ask children about school experiences beyond academic matters, Ttofi writes.
Bringing to light the many facets surrounding topics like bullying is good, because this is a sensitive subject, and like many others it doesn’t get the attention when it happens and understanding that previous generations may have just swept it under the rug.
This is real, and it does impact young people when they are learning and putting their lives together, preparing for adulthood. It needs to be addressed. Get the help your teens need, ask a lot of questions and participate in their lives, they depend on adults to show them the positive ways so they too can be a productive adult as they grow up.