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Youth victimization in Sweden: Prevalence, characteristics and relation to mental health and behavioral problems in young adulthood
- Authors:
- CARTER Asa K., ANDERSHED Anna-Karin, ANDERSHED Henrik
- Journal article citation:
- Child Abuse and Neglect, 38(8), 2014, pp.1290-1302.
- Publisher:
- Elsevier
The present study examines multiple types of victimization simultaneously, their prevalence and characteristics in childhood and adolescence, and it examines the associations between victimization and poly-victimization on the one hand and single and multiple mental health and behavioural problems on the other. The sample consisted of 2,500 Swedish young adults (20–24 years) who provided detailed report of multiple types of lifetime victimization and current health and behaviours via an interview and a questionnaire. Results showed that it was more common to be victimized in adolescence than in childhood and more common to be victimized repeatedly rather than a single time, among both males and females. Males and females were victimized in noticeably different ways and partially at different places and by different perpetrators. With regard to mental health and behavioural problems, anxiety, post-traumatic stress, self-harm, and criminality were clearly overrepresented among both males and females who had experienced any type of victimization. Poly-victimization was related to single and multiple mental health and behavioural problems among both males and females. Concludes that professionals need to conduct thorough evaluations of victimization when completing mental health assessments among troubled youths, and that youth might benefit from the development of interventions for poly-victimized youth. (Edited publisher abstract)