Publication | Closed Access
Gender differences and social support: Mediators or moderators between peer victimization and depressive feelings?
64
Citations
51
References
2011
Year
Social PsychologyPeer RelationshipEducationMental HealthPeer VictimizationSocial SupportPsychologySocial SciencesSocioemotional DevelopmentSocial IssuesGender StudiesSocial-emotional DevelopmentYouth Well-beingSelf-esteemChild PsychologyChild Well-beingHierarchical Regression AnalysesSocial SkillsSchool PsychologyBullyingDepressionGender DifferencesAdolescent PsychologyApplied Social PsychologySocio-emotional HealthSocial-emotional WellbeingSocial StressPsychosocial ResearchBullying PreventionPsychosocial IssueSchool ViolenceChild DevelopmentSociologyAggressionVictimized Children
Abstract Using self‐report questionnaires, a survey among 606 Dutch primary school children aged 10 to 12 years examined relationships among social support, gender, victimization, and depressive feelings. Hierarchical regression analyses confirmed that victims and bully/victims would report more depressive feelings than uninvolved children. There was no evidence that social support moderated the relationship between victimization and depressive feelings. However, social support appeared to influence the depressive feelings of victimized children, that is, pupils who were victimized received very little support and hence suffered depression. This general mediation effect could be observed in boys. In girls, the mediating effects of social support were more diffuse. For girls, the risk factor for the development of depressive feelings did not so much pertain to the type of bullying as to the subsequent lack of social support they experienced. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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