Does School Bullying Affect Adult Health? Population Survey of Health-Related Quality of Life and Past Victimization

Objective: The purpose of the present study was to determine the proportion of adult South Australians who report having experienced school bullying and to examine the relationship between past victimization and adult health-related quality of life. Method: A representative sample (n=2833) of metropolitan and country South Australian adults were asked in a face-to-face interview whether they had experienced bullying when they were at school. Health-related quality of life was measured using the Medical Outcomes Study Short Form 36-item health survey questions (SF-36). Regression analyses (linear and logistic) were performed, taking into account survey weights. Results: Nearly one-fifth of adults reported having experienced bullying when they were at school. Older persons and those born overseas were less likely to report having been bullied. Those reporting that they had been bullied experienced significantly poorer mental and physical health compared to those who had not been bullied. Conclusions: Adults commonly reported experiencing bullying while at school and these reports were associated with lower health-related quality of life in adulthood. School bullying needs further investigation as a preventable cause of mental health problems across the lifespan.

[1]  I. Rivers Retrospective reports of school bullying: Stability of recall and its implications for research , 2001 .

[2]  A. Moll,et al.  Quality of life of adult retinoblastoma survivors in the Netherlands , 2007, Health and quality of life outcomes.

[3]  M. Boulton,et al.  Twenty years' research on peer victimization and psychosocial maladjustment: a meta-analytic review of cross-sectional studies. , 2000, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[4]  David J. D. Wilson,et al.  The South Australian Health Omnibus Survey 15 years on: has public health benefited? , 2006 .

[5]  R. Osborne,et al.  The SF36 Version 2: critical analyses of population weights, scoring algorithms and population norms , 2007, Quality of Life Research.

[6]  Katrina Jane Williams,et al.  Association of common health symptoms with bullying in primary school children , 1996, BMJ.

[7]  I. Gotlib,et al.  Psychopathology and early experience: a reappraisal of retrospective reports. , 1993, Psychological bulletin.

[8]  L. Morales,et al.  The RAND-36 measure of health-related quality of life , 2001, Annals of medicine.

[9]  A. Sourander,et al.  What Is the Early Adulthood Outcome of Boys Who Bully or Are Bullied in Childhood? The Finnish “From a Boy to a Man” Study , 2007, Pediatrics.

[10]  G. Parker,et al.  Do Bullied Children Become Anxious and Depressed Adults?: A Cross-Sectional Investigation of the Correlates of Bullying and Anxious Depression , 2006, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[11]  L Karstadt,et al.  Bullying involvement in primary school and common health problems , 2001, Archives of disease in childhood.

[12]  Karoline Kragelund Nielsen,et al.  Exposure to bullying at school and depression in adulthood: a study of Danish men born in 1953. , 2008, European journal of public health.

[13]  K. Rigby The Relationship Between Reported Health and Involvement in Bully/ Victim Problems among Male and Female Secondary Schoolchildren , 1998, Journal of health psychology.

[14]  W. Bor,et al.  Association of bullying with adolescent health‐related quality of life , 2003, Journal of paediatrics and child health.

[15]  E. Svavarsdóttir,et al.  Health-related quality of life in Icelandic school children. , 2006, Scandinavian journal of caring sciences.