4.4 Article

Association between bullying victimization and e-cigarette use among German students

Journal

AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR
Volume 47, Issue 4, Pages 421-429

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ab.21951

Keywords

adolescents; bullying; e‐ cigarette; observational study; victimization

Funding

  1. DAK-Gesundheit, a German Health Insurance

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This study found an association between bullying victimization and e-cigarette use among German students, where the frequency of bullying experiences also impacted the frequency of e-cigarette use. More longitudinal studies are needed to investigate the temporal relationship between victimization and e-cigarette use.
This study examined the association between bullying victimization and e-cigarette use. Data from a 2019-2020 German student survey were used (N = 16,476). The target population consisted of students enrolled in grades 5-10, with a mean age of 13.1 years (SD = 1.8), and equal gender distribution (49.5% female). Mixed-effect multivariable logistic regression models were used to examine the association between bullying victimization (attacked physically, assaulted verbally, experienced relational bullying, sexual harassment, cyberbullying) and current e-cigarette use. The multivariable analysis controlled for age, sex, sensation-seeking, socioeconomic status, school performance, type of school attended, and substance use (current cigarette smoking, hookah smoking, and alcohol drinking). Overall 510 (3.7%) students reported current use of e-cigarettes. The odds for using e-cigarettes increased each step of being bullied from never, rarely, sometimes, once a week, to several times a week by 2.03 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.81, 2.29) in the unadjusted model, and by 1.46 (95% CI: 1.24, 1.71) in the covariate-adjusted model. Data indicate an empirical association between victimization and e-cigarette use among German students. Design limitations prevent the conclusion of a causal relationship, calling for well-designed longitudinal studies to investigate the temporal sequence between victimization and e-cigarette use.

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