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Bullying and Victimization in Overweight and Obese Outpatient Children and Adolescents: An Italian Multicentric Study

Authors :
Sabino Pesce
Alessandro Sartorio
Perla Maria Fiumani
Giulio Maltoni
Nicola Corciulo
Maria Rosaria Licenziati
Rita Tanas
Elena Di Pietro
Manuela Deiana
Daniela Driul
Antonino Crinò
Alessandra Garrasi
Dario Bacchini
Francesca Lombardi
Giuliana Valerio
Lorenzo Iughetti
Bacchini, Dario
Licenziati, Maria Rosaria
Garrasi, Alessandra
Corciulo, Nicola
Driul, Daniela
Tanas, Rita
Fiumani, Perla Maria
Di Pietro, Elena
Pesce, Sabino
Crino, Antonino
Maltoni, Giulio
Iughetti, Lorenzo
Sartorio, Alessandro
Deiana, Manuela
Lombardi, Francesca
Valerio, Giuliana
Source :
PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 10, Iss 11, p e0142715 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Public Library of Science, 2015.

Abstract

ObjectiveBeing overweight or obese is one of the most common reasons that children and adolescents are teased at school. We carried out a study in order to investigate: i) the relation between weight status and school bullying and ii) the relation between weight status categories and types of victimization and bullying in an outpatient sample of Italian children and adolescents with different degrees of overweight from minimal overweight up to severe obesity.Participants/methodsNine-hundred-forty-seven outpatient children and adolescents (age range 6.0-14.0 years) were recruited in 14 hospitals distributed over the country of Italy. The participants were classified as normal-weight (N = 129), overweight (N = 126), moderately obese (N = 568), and severely obese (N = 124). The nature and extent of verbal, physical and relational bullying and victimization were assessed with an adapted version of the revised Olweus bully-victim questionnaire. Each participant was coded as bully, victim, bully-victim, or not involved.ResultsNormal-weight and overweight participants were less involved in bullying than obese participants; severely obese males were more involved in the double role of bully and victim. Severely obese children and adolescents suffered not only from verbal victimization but also from physical victimization and exclusion from group activities. Weight status categories were not directly related to bullying behaviour; however severely obese males perpetrated more bullying behaviour compared to severely obese females.ConclusionsObesity and bullying among children and adolescents are of ongoing concern worldwide and may be closely related. Common strategies of intervention are needed to cope with these two social health challenges.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
10
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dbed0857aae2f4731a1666ed2dd8fc20