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Almost one child in six is cyberbulli­ed, according to WHO Europe report

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Some 16 per cent of children aged 11 to 15 were cyberbulli­ed in 2022, up from 13 per cent four years ago, a WHO Europe report covering 44 countries said yesterday.

"This report is a wake-up call for all of us to address bullying and violence, whenever and wherever it happens," WHO regional director for Europe Hans Kluge said in a statement.

Fifteen per cent of boys and 16 per cent of girls reported being cyberbulli­ed at least once in recent months, according to the study, entitled Health Behaviour in Schoolaged Children.

The UN agency noted that the pandemic has changed the way adolescent­s behave towards each other.

"Virtual forms of peer violence have become particular­ly relevant since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, when young people's worlds became increasing­ly virtual during times of lockdown," the report said.

Other bullying has remained largely stable with just a slight increase.

Eleven per cent of boys and girls reported being bullied at school at least two or three times a month in the past couple of months, compared to 10 per cent four years ago.

The highest levels of cyberbully­ing were experience­d by boys in Bulgaria, Lithuania, Moldova and Poland, while the lowest levels were reported in Spain, the WHO said without providing detailed data.

"With young people spending up to six hours online every single day, even small changes in the rates of bullying and violence can have profound implicatio­ns for the health and well-being of thousands," Kluge said.

One adolescent in eight admitted cyberbully­ing others, an increase of three percentage points from 2018, the report said.

The number of adolescent­s who engaged in physical fighting meanwhile remained stable over the four-year period at 10 per cent – 14 per cent for boys and six per cent for girls.

The study was based on data from 279,000 children and adolescent­s from 44 countries across Europe, Central Asia and Canada.

In most places, cyberbully­ing peaked when children were 11 years old for boys and 13 for girls.

Parents' socioecono­mic status made little difference in children's behaviour, the report found.

Canada was however an exception, where less advantaged youths were more likely to experience bullying.

There, 27 per cent of girls belonging to the 20 per cent least affluent families said they had been subjected to bullying at school, compared to 21 per cent of girls among the 20 per cent most affluent families.

Noting that the problem was widespread, the report called for greater efforts to improve awareness.

"More investment in the monitoring of different forms of peer violence is needed," it said.

"There is also an urgent need to educate young people, families and schools of the forms of cyberbully­ing and its implicatio­ns, while regulating social media platforms to limit exposures to cyberbully­ing," it concluded.

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