The Relationships of Cyber-bullying and Bullying With Mental Health Among Taiwanese Adolescents

NCT ID: NCT02860832

Last Updated: 2016-08-09

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

UNKNOWN

Total Enrollment

50 participants

Study Classification

OBSERVATIONAL

Study Start Date

2016-06-30

Study Completion Date

2017-06-30

Brief Summary

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Background and significance: Though the problem of bullying among adolescents is evidently increasing and of a serious social concern, it is often undetected until serious outcomes have surfaced. In recent years, along with the rapid expansion of the Internet, social network services (SNS) and smart phones, "cyber-bullying" has been growing. Compared to the traditional bullying, cyberbullying is unique in nature and potentially more hazardous in terms of invisibility, lack of control, where it enables communication with a broad range of people at any time and place.

To explore deeper understanding of the magnitude and the impact of the bullying among adolescents in Taiwan to inform public policy and future health intervention programs may be beneficial not only to Taiwan but also to Asia as a whole. Many Asian countries now suffer the similar problems of bullying among adolescents, since these countries share similar characteristics of development (spread of internet, SNSs and smart phones).

Goal and objectives: This study aims to explore Taiwanese adolescents' experiences, perceptions, opinions and mental health regarding cyberbullying and traditional bullying to inform the development of questionnaire in the quantitative phase of mixed methods study.

Study design: A qualitative study design with in depth interviews will be adopted.

Target population and study setting: Senior high school students will be recruited from Taipei city, Taiwan.

Sample size and sampling method: Participants will be sampled by convenience sampling until thematic saturation is attained, probably around 50 students.

Data collection: Face-to-face in-depth interview with semi-structured questionnaire will be used.

Data analysis: All interviews will be voice-recorded, transcribed, analyzed by thematic analysis procedure. Analysis process will include familiarization, coding, searching for themes, reviewing the themes, defining, naming themes and writing up or weaving the analytic narrative. Triangulation and supervision will also ensure credibility and balance in the process.

Detailed Description

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Background and significance: Though the problem of bullying among adolescents is evidently increasing and of a serious social concern, it is often undetected, overlooked and noticeable only after serious outcomes have surfaced. In the recent years, along with the rapid expansion of internet, social network services (SNS) and smart phones, bullying through such electronic means, "cyber-bullying", has been growing. Compared to the traditional bullying cyberbullying is unique in nature and potentially more hazardous in terms of invisibility, lack of control, where it enables communication with a broad range of people at any time and at any place. This study is based on mixed methods study. The investigators hope that the investigators study could contribute to the deeper understanding of the magnitude and impact of the bullying among adolescents in Taiwan and to inform public policy and future health intervention programs which may be beneficial not only to the Taiwan but to Asia, as a whole, as many Asian countries now suffer the similar problems of bullying among adolescents as the countries share similar characteristics of development (spread of internet, SNSs and smart phones) having resembling lifestyle and values.

Study purpose: The purpose of this study is to investigate the prevalence of traditional bullying and cyberbullying and the association between cyber-bullying and traditional bullying with mental health among Taiwanese adolescents.

Study design: A mixed methods research design with qualitative study followed by quantitative study will be used in this research. Senior high school students will be included in Taiwan. For qualitative phase of this study, purposive sampling will be used to recruit students. For the quantitative phase of the study, sampling will be conducted by probability proportionate to size sampling procedure. For the qualitative phase of this study, in depth interview will be used to develop the quantitative questionnaire. An anonymous questionnaire developed from qualitative will be used to measure the variable of self-esteem, depression, suicidal ideation, traditional bullying and cyberbullying.

Data analysis: For qualitative study, all interviews will be voice-recorded, transcribed, analyzed by thematic analysis procedure. Quantitative data will be statistically analyzed by using SAS software. Descriptive data will be calculated for all variables. Multiple regressions will be performed to understand the relationship between socio-demographic variables, cyberbullying, traditional bullying, self-esteem, depression and suicidal ideation which separated by gender.

Conditions

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Depression

Study Design

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Study Time Perspective

CROSS_SECTIONAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* The 16-18 aged high school students now studying in Taipei will be recruited in this study.

Exclusion Criteria

* Students who are attending schools at night, since it's difficult to require them to participate in our research.
* Students who are studying in special educational schools for mentally handicapped because they will be unable to be interviewed and complete questionnaires. Also those who failed to obtain parental consents and individual consents will be excluded from the study.
Minimum Eligible Age

16 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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National Taiwan University Hospital

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Chang-Chuan Chan

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Department of public health, college of public health, National Taiwan University

Locations

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National Taiwan University Hospital

Taipei, , Taiwan

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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Taiwan

Central Contacts

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Chang-Chuan Chan

Role: CONTACT

886-2-3366-8082

Chi-Hsin Chen

Role: CONTACT

886-2-3366-8092

Facility Contacts

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Chang-Chuan Chan

Role: primary

886-2-3366-8082

Other Identifiers

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201601074RIND

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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