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Peer-reviewed

Prevalence of traditional bullying and cyberbullying among children and adolescents in Australia: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Amarzaya Jadambaa, Hannah J. Thomas, James G. Scott, Nicholas Graves, David Brain, Rosana Pacella

Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry · 2019

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Summary

BACKGROUND: . METHOD: A systematic review of electronic databases (A+ Education, EMBASE, ERIC, PubMed, PsycINFO and Scopus up to 27 May 2017) was conducted. In addition, reference lists of included studies, theses recorded at the National Library of Australia, and government websites were surveyed to identify local area data as well as state and nationally representative data. Overall, 898 studies were screened and out of the 126 studies assessed for eligibility, 46 satisfied the pre-determined inclusion criteria. Meta-analyses based on quality-effects models generated pooled prevalence estimates for each of the two types of bullying involvement (victimisation and perpetration), as well as distinct models for traditional bullying and cyberbullying experiences by the type of involvement. RE

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1177/0004867419846393
Catalogue ID
SNmojmglue-kuohf9
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