2008
DOI: 10.1093/jpepsy/jsn116
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Brief Report: The Association Between Peer Victimization, Prosocial Support, and Treatment Adherence in Children and Adolescents with Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Abstract: The findings from this pilot study suggest that prosocial support may buffer children with IBD from experiencing the more negative effects of peer victimization on treatment adherence and highlight the importance of social interactions in youth with IBD. Implications for treatment are discussed.

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Cited by 33 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…Conversely, peer victimization has been associated with lower treatment adherence in adolescents with IBD 59. Therefore, it is important to assess the possible role that positive and negative peer interactions play in adolescents with IBD, as it may affect patterns of self-management.…”
Section: Increasing Quality and Utility Of Social Supportmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Conversely, peer victimization has been associated with lower treatment adherence in adolescents with IBD 59. Therefore, it is important to assess the possible role that positive and negative peer interactions play in adolescents with IBD, as it may affect patterns of self-management.…”
Section: Increasing Quality and Utility Of Social Supportmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Behavioral science research findings, which have consistently underscored that effective execution and repetition of complex actions such as adherence behaviors depend upon the availability of multifaceted resources, such as motivation, energy, attention, feedback, family support and structure, and other factors, inform our understanding of critical influences on treatment adherence and designing effective interventions. 2,6 Moreover, barriers that occur in multiple environmental contexts (e.g., social stigma or absence of school-based accommodations [56][57][58][59][60][61][62][63][64][65][66] ) can also be highly influential. 2,6 However, factors that limit or deplete child or family capacities (e.g., psychological dysfunction or stressors) increase the probability of problematic self-management and treatment nonadherence.…”
Section: Facilitators and Barriers To Treatment Adherencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…9, November/December 2013 based on factors such as the adolescent's emerging autonomy, 47,84 immature executive functioning, 60 competing activities such as the emerging importance of peer relationships, 61,62 and the significant challenges encountered by parents in monitoring their adolescent's treatment adherence in ways that do not engender disruptive family conflict. 34, No.…”
Section: During Developmental Transitionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[51] The role of depression in causing poorer adherence and glycemic control can be explained further when examining the role of peer victimization in this relationship. Peer victimization, as used in the psychological literature, can be overt forms (such as physical and verbal assault) and/or relational forms (social ostracism), [52] and both kinds of peer victimization are higher in several clinical pediatric populations, such as in youth with learning disorders, [53] obesity, [54] endocrine disorders, [55] inflammatory bowel disease, [56] etc. While little research has been conducted on peer victimization in a population of youth with diabetes, some recent studies have replicated the previous results with other chronic health conditions, finding that youth with diabetes have higher rates of relational peer victimization than their peers without diabetes.…”
Section: The Challenges Of Type 1 Diabetesmentioning
confidence: 99%