Department of Sociology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
J Interpers Violence. 2022 Nov;37(21-22):NP19983-NP20011. doi: 10.1177/08862605211050092. Epub 2021 Nov 22.
While prior research has well-documented the detrimental effect of cyberbullying victimization on health and well-being among children and adolescents, less is known about whether the same adverse pattern can be observed among adults. Moreover, it is unclear about what psychosocial resources might moderate this association. The present study uses a nationally representative cross-sectional survey-2014 Canadian General Social Survey ( = 17,548)-to examine three research questions. First, is cyberbullying victimization associated with adults' self-rated health, mental health, and life satisfaction? Second, how does religiosity-religious service attendance and religious beliefs-moderate this association? Third, do any observed patterns further differ for men and women? Through a series of logistic and ordinary least squares regression models, the results show that adults who experienced cyberbullying victimization in the past 5 years are more likely to report poor self-rated health and mental health compared to those who did not experience cyberbullying victimization in the past 5 years. Likewise, cyberbullying victimization is also associated with lower levels of life satisfaction. In addition, the adverse associations of cyberbullying victimization in the past 5 years with self-rated health and life satisfaction are weaker among those who attended religious service at least once a week in the past twelve months. A similar pattern is observed for the buffering effect of viewing religious beliefs as very important in the adverse association of cyberbullying victimization in the past 5 years with self-rated life satisfaction. There is also evidence suggesting the gendered buffering effect of the importance of religious beliefs in the association between cyberbullying victimization and self-rated health. This study makes important empirical and theoretical contributions to the growing field of research on the association between cyberbullying victimization and health and well-being and to our understanding of how religion matters to individuals dealing with stressful experiences.
虽然先前的研究已经充分记录了网络欺凌受害对儿童和青少年健康和福祉的有害影响,但对于成年人是否也存在同样的不良模式知之甚少。此外,尚不清楚哪些社会心理资源可能会缓和这种关联。本研究使用具有全国代表性的横断面调查——2014 年加拿大综合社会调查(=17548)——来检验三个研究问题。首先,网络欺凌受害是否与成年人的自我评估健康、心理健康和生活满意度相关?其次,宗教信仰——宗教服务的参与度和宗教信仰——如何调节这种关联?第三,观察到的模式是否会因男性和女性而有所不同?通过一系列逻辑回归和普通最小二乘回归模型,结果表明,与过去 5 年没有经历过网络欺凌受害的成年人相比,过去 5 年经历过网络欺凌受害的成年人更有可能报告自我评估健康状况和心理健康状况较差。同样,网络欺凌受害也与较低的生活满意度相关。此外,在过去 12 个月中每周至少参加一次宗教服务的成年人,过去 5 年网络欺凌受害与自我评估健康和生活满意度之间的不良关联较弱。在过去 5 年网络欺凌受害与自我评估生活满意度之间的不良关联中,将宗教信仰视为非常重要的观点也存在类似的缓冲效应。还有证据表明,宗教信仰的重要性在网络欺凌受害与自我评估健康之间的关联中存在性别缓冲效应。本研究为网络欺凌受害与健康和福祉之间关联的研究领域以及我们对宗教对处理压力体验的个人的重要性的理解做出了重要的实证和理论贡献。