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Commentary on: Kritsotakis G, Papanikolaou M, Androulakis E, et al. Associations of bullying and cyberbullying with substance use and sexual risk taking in young adults. J Nurs Scholarsh 2017;49:360–70.
Implications for practice and research
The effects of bullying and cyberbullying can be linked to a number of health risk behaviours. Education and healthcare professionals need to include prevention and intervention strategies within educational curricula, building on replacing maladaptive coping strategies with adaptive responses.
Future research should explore the adaptive and maladaptive coping mechanisms employed by victims and victim-bullies during the transition to adulthood and how this impacts on their relationships.
Context
The effects of traditional bullying on children and adolescent health and well-being is widely recognised; these include low self-esteem, anxiety, depression, social isolation, self-harm and suicidal thoughts.1 More recently, research has explored cyberbullying and there is now a growing body of evidence that suggests traditional bullying and cyberbullying are predictive of …
Footnotes
Competing interests None declared.
Provenance and peer review Commissioned; internally peer reviewed.