Sibling bullying linked to later (young adult) depression, self-harm
While to topic of corporal punishment, belittling, and hostile home environments is on people's minds... here is some grist for the mill.
Where do you suppose siblings learn to be such bullies?
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L. Bowes, D. Wolke, C. Joinson, S. T. Lereya, G. Lewis. Sibling Bullying and Risk of Depression, Anxiety, and Self-Harm: A Prospective Cohort Study. PEDIATRICS, 2014; DOI: 10.1542/peds.2014-0832
Summary:
A new study has found that children who revealed they had been bullied by their brothers or sisters several times a week or more during early adolescence were twice as likely to report being clinically depressed as young adults.
A new study has found that children who revealed they had been bullied by their brothers or sisters several times a week or more during early adolescence were twice as likely to report being clinically depressed as young adults.
They were also twice as likely to say they had self-harmed within the previous year compared with those who had not been bullied.
The findings, published in the journal Pediatrics, are the results of the first longitudinal study to investigate possible links between sibling bullying and clinical depression and self-harm in young adults.
The research, conducted by the Universities of Oxford, Warwick, Bristol and UCL, suggests interventions are needed to specifically target a form of bullying which it says, to date, has been largely ignored by academics, policy makers and clinicians.
Lead author Dr Lucy Bowes, from the Department of Social Policy and Intervention at the University of Oxford, said: 'Forms of bullying where victims are shoved around the playground or targeted at work have been well documented, however, this study uncovers a largely hidden form of bullying. Victims of sibling bullying are offered little escape as sibling relationships endure throughout development.
'We are not talking about the sort of teasing that often goes on within families, but incidents that occur several times a week, in which victims are ignored by their brothers or sisters, or are subjected to verbal or physical violence.'
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/09/140919100258.htm
elleng
(136,833 posts)as it's happened in my family. Emotional bullying by older daughter to her younger sister, who only now, at the age of 26, seems to have overcome her depression. As her older sister has recently reached out to her (they've been incommunicado for months,) the younger says she doesn't want to see or talk/text/e.mail with the older, as 'it always results in pain.'
HereSince1628
(36,063 posts)Ryu Takizawa, Barbara Maughan, Louise Arseneault. Adult Health Outcomes of Childhood Bullying Victimization: Evidence From a Five-Decade Longitudinal British Birth Cohort. American Journal of Psychiatry, 2014; DOI: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2014.13101401
The negative social, physical and mental health effects of childhood bullying are still evident nearly 40 years later, according to new research. The study is the first to look at the effects of bullying beyond early adulthood. Just over a quarter of children in the study (28%) had been bullied occasionally, and 15% bullied frequently -- similar to rates in the UK today. Individuals who were bullied in childhood were more likely to have poorer physical and psychological health and cognitive functioning at age 50. Individuals who were frequently bullied in childhood were at an increased risk of depression, anxiety disorders, and suicidal thoughts.
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My older brother may have been born to be a bully, but he was certainly facilitated in his development by abusive, demeaning parenting. As the oldest, he was frequently the pre-teen in-charge when my parents left, and he used all their tactics, but with absolutely no thought or moderation. When I was 6, he broke my jaw and knocked out 4 of my teeth. I was coerced into not telling, but an infection set in and attacked my gums leaving a wound open to the bone for months. It was found by a dentist assistant during a school based dental check-up program. At that point people got upset, but not my parents. While sitting between them in the principal's office as they were talking to a CPS rep the cover story was I hurt myself when I fell out of a tree.
It seems, neither the effect of being bullied, or the turning into a bully ever really resolve. In 2005 my mother died, and that older brother at age 58, became the executor of my mother's estate by right of primogenitor. He said to our sister, who at that time was 54 years old...'take whatever you want, I don't care about keeping track of dividing up the household goods'. So, she started to take whatever she wanted and it made him -extraordinarily- mad as she wanted things he had no idea she might claim. And he was mad enough to hit her in the face with a closed fist which knocked her down.
Now, one might assume that would have resulted in a call to police and a criminal charge with the brother's likely removal from the position of executor. But it didn't. Neither she, or a younger brother who was present (and who related the incident to me years later) ever called the police and apparently neither did anything but get out of the way of his rampage.
Since my mother's death, I've been contacted by one or another sibling, niece of nephew, or cousin and my answer is identical to the younger daughter in your story. "I don't want to see or communicate with any of you because it ALWAYS results in pain". And it does sometimes physical.