Bullying is a serious threat to our youth today. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), bullying affects 20% of high school students and bullying affects 16% of high school students. A survey created by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also found that 33% of students aged 12 to 18 reported bullying at school and 27% of students aged 12 to 18 years old had at least 1 or 2 I reported bullying that I was bullied. In high school, the highest bullying rate (25%) is reported at least once a week.
Bullying can result in short-term and long-term consequences that adversely affect victims and bullying. Traditional bullying involvement often involves requesting help from the victim and setting the impact on bullying, but both victims and bullying benefit from psychosocial support You can receive it.
Every child is different and may show different behavior during or after fellow bullying. It is important to note that bullying can last for a long time before students ask for help because increased relationships of human relationships and bullying has become easier than ever.
According to a survey conducted by California State University (UCLA) in Los Angeles for 2,300 students in eleven high schools in Los Angeles, bullying in high school was associated with lower grade in secondary school for 3 years. Students who are evaluated as most bullied are significantly inferior to their colleagues in academic performance.
Psychosomatic symptoms (stomach pain, headache, muscle pain, other physical diseases, medical reasons are not known)
It is difficult to sympathize with bullying, but parents and school officials need to be aware that bullying is engaged in bullying for some reason. Otherwise, this behavior will continue over time and may worsen
A longitudinal study led by a group of Norwegian scientists investigated the long-term psychological impact of adolescence. The results of this study showed that all groups involved in adolescent bullying (both bullies and victims) experienced mental health outcomes during adulthood. Victims showed high levels of depressive symptoms during adulthood, but the risk of psychiatric hospitalization due to mental health disorders increased in both groups.
Through immediate and appropriate mental health care and support systems, victims can avoid potential long-term effects of bullying. However, without intervention, children face the following dangers.
Childhood bullying has a serious effect on the short-term and long-term health of children. Immediate intervention and long-term follow-up can help mediate some of these effects. Schools, families, and communities must work together to understand bullying and its effects and find ways to reduce bullying in schools and communities and methods to eliminate them.
Bullying has long-term and short-term effects on bullying and victims, whether intellectually, physically, emotionally or socially. After that, the bullies began to lose their power, self-esteem declined, eventually became a social retreat, and because of the lack of ability to cope with violence there is the possibility of faced with much of their own lives. Relationship issues In addition, they are at high risk of getting involved in crime and drug abuse. Research on history shows that bullying aid has started in the past decade. In the past, some children were bullying other people, and for victims of bullying, there was not enough help just like the current bullying prevention campaign. Unfortunately, bullying still exists all over the world, in fact it has not changed.
The result of bullying as a short-term influence of the victim as a victim is very stressful to the child. Many children do not particularly like school, especially during breaks and physical education classes. Many casualties began to distrust all the colleagues at school and encountered problems when making friends. Extreme victims may suffer from depression and physical illness. The long-term impact of victims' long-term impact is different. Most of the victims of bullying worked well at school, and as we grew older we were able to make friends. Especially when receiving important support from adults, most victims will survive experiences bullied without long-term impact.