Ideas for addressing electronic harassment among adolescents attending a video blogging convention

Abstract Background Electronic harassment affects 20–40% of adolescents and has been associated with significant negative outcomes including physical (ex. headache, abdominal pain), psychological (ex. depression, anxiety), and psychosocial (ex. school avoidance) problems. Evidence-based strategies t...

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Main Authors: Ellen Selkie, Yolanda Evans, Adrienne Ton, Nikita Midamba, Megan A. Moreno
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-08-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-018-5907-6
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spelling doaj-ff02a2f648984db8a3dd522294b8cb962020-11-24T21:51:49ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582018-08-011811810.1186/s12889-018-5907-6Ideas for addressing electronic harassment among adolescents attending a video blogging conventionEllen Selkie0Yolanda Evans1Adrienne Ton2Nikita Midamba3Megan A. Moreno4University of MichiganUniversity of WashingtonColumbia UniversitySeattle Children’s Research InstituteUniversity of WisconsinAbstract Background Electronic harassment affects 20–40% of adolescents and has been associated with significant negative outcomes including physical (ex. headache, abdominal pain), psychological (ex. depression, anxiety), and psychosocial (ex. school avoidance) problems. Evidence-based strategies to address electronic harassment are lacking, and few studies have incorporated adolescent input into intervention design. The purpose of this study was to use a novel data collection approach to determine perspectives on electronic harassment intervention and prevention from a targeted group of highly engaged adolescent technology users. Methods We conducted a qualitative survey of a purposeful sample of adolescents age 14 to 18 who were attending a video blogger convention in Seattle, Washington. Participants were approached by research staff and asked to read a vignette about an adolescent target of electronic harassment, then write down ideas for helping the target and/or preventing the scenario. Written responses were analyzed using a thematic analysis approach with an iterative comparative method to resolve any code discrepancies. We subsequently categorized codes into thematic code families to reach consensus about significant themes. Results 67 eligible adolescents completed the survey. 91% of participants were female with a mean age of 15.3 years (SD = 1.3). Code families emerged regarding people who could be involved in responses to electronic harassment: (1) Individuals targeted by electronic harassment, (2) Friends and bystanders, (3) Adults, and (4) Social media websites and policymakers. Conclusions Findings demonstrate adolescent technology users’ views on several creative strategies to prevent or intervene with electronic harassment. These strategies can be categorized using a socioecological framework, demonstrating potential to address electronic harassment on multiple levels. Many suggested responses involved the target of electronic harassment, rather than the perpetrator; future education efforts may require additional focus on perpetrators for more upstream prevention.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-018-5907-6CyberbullyingElectronic harassmentAdolescentsQualitative
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ellen Selkie
Yolanda Evans
Adrienne Ton
Nikita Midamba
Megan A. Moreno
spellingShingle Ellen Selkie
Yolanda Evans
Adrienne Ton
Nikita Midamba
Megan A. Moreno
Ideas for addressing electronic harassment among adolescents attending a video blogging convention
BMC Public Health
Cyberbullying
Electronic harassment
Adolescents
Qualitative
author_facet Ellen Selkie
Yolanda Evans
Adrienne Ton
Nikita Midamba
Megan A. Moreno
author_sort Ellen Selkie
title Ideas for addressing electronic harassment among adolescents attending a video blogging convention
title_short Ideas for addressing electronic harassment among adolescents attending a video blogging convention
title_full Ideas for addressing electronic harassment among adolescents attending a video blogging convention
title_fullStr Ideas for addressing electronic harassment among adolescents attending a video blogging convention
title_full_unstemmed Ideas for addressing electronic harassment among adolescents attending a video blogging convention
title_sort ideas for addressing electronic harassment among adolescents attending a video blogging convention
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Abstract Background Electronic harassment affects 20–40% of adolescents and has been associated with significant negative outcomes including physical (ex. headache, abdominal pain), psychological (ex. depression, anxiety), and psychosocial (ex. school avoidance) problems. Evidence-based strategies to address electronic harassment are lacking, and few studies have incorporated adolescent input into intervention design. The purpose of this study was to use a novel data collection approach to determine perspectives on electronic harassment intervention and prevention from a targeted group of highly engaged adolescent technology users. Methods We conducted a qualitative survey of a purposeful sample of adolescents age 14 to 18 who were attending a video blogger convention in Seattle, Washington. Participants were approached by research staff and asked to read a vignette about an adolescent target of electronic harassment, then write down ideas for helping the target and/or preventing the scenario. Written responses were analyzed using a thematic analysis approach with an iterative comparative method to resolve any code discrepancies. We subsequently categorized codes into thematic code families to reach consensus about significant themes. Results 67 eligible adolescents completed the survey. 91% of participants were female with a mean age of 15.3 years (SD = 1.3). Code families emerged regarding people who could be involved in responses to electronic harassment: (1) Individuals targeted by electronic harassment, (2) Friends and bystanders, (3) Adults, and (4) Social media websites and policymakers. Conclusions Findings demonstrate adolescent technology users’ views on several creative strategies to prevent or intervene with electronic harassment. These strategies can be categorized using a socioecological framework, demonstrating potential to address electronic harassment on multiple levels. Many suggested responses involved the target of electronic harassment, rather than the perpetrator; future education efforts may require additional focus on perpetrators for more upstream prevention.
topic Cyberbullying
Electronic harassment
Adolescents
Qualitative
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-018-5907-6
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