A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

School Violence Among a Nationally Representative Sample of Adolescents in Chile




AuthorsAbio A, Wilburn JK, Shaikh MA, Wilson ML

Publication year2020

JournalFrontiers in Public Health

Journal name in sourceFrontiers in public health

Journal acronymFront Public Health

Volume8

Number of pages7

ISSN2296-2565

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2020.00046

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/46130830


Abstract

Background: School violence is widely acknowledged as a public health problem with considerable consequences on student learning and social development. There are also a wide range of health consequences. A large share of previous research on school violence has focused on populations in the global north, with significant gaps in the state of knowledge in the world's emerging economies. To this end, the present study provides an examination of correlates for school-based violence in Chile using a nationally representative cohort.

Methods: Six independent variables were considered (age, sex, physical activity, sedentary life style, bullying victimization, food insecurity) within a logistic regression model to ascertain the strength and direction of associations with physical fighting.

Results: Among the surveyed students, ~13.08% reported being involved in two or more physical fights during the twelve month recall period. Males were significantly over represented among those reporting being involved in a fight OR 2.91 (CI = 1.98–4.27). Those who reported experiencing food insecurity were 5.29 (CI = 1.43–19.50) times more likely to have been involved in a physical fight. Students who reported being bullied were 2.41 (CI = 1.67–3.47) times more likely to have been involved in physical fights. While age provided protection from involvement in physical fights with an adjusted odds ratio of 0.91 (CI = 0.84–0.98).

Conclusion: Consistent with previous research, our results suggest that the use of school-based interventions that target multiple risk behaviors may be helpful in reducing rates of physical fighting.


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