Hasbro Children’s Hospital study: Nearly half of all teens visiting ED report peer violence, cyberbullying

PROVIDENCE – A study from Hasbro Children’s Hospital has found that nearly 50 percent of teens seen in the emergency department for any reason report peer violence and nearly 50 percent also report being the victims of cyberbullying. Almost one-quarter of teens in the ED also report symptoms consistent with post-traumatic stress disorder. The study, led by Dr. Megan Ranney, shows that cyberbullying, physical peer violence and PTSD are common and interrelated, and that early identification and treatment are crucial.

Currently published online in General Hospital Psychiatry, the study examined 353 adolescents in the Hasbro Children’s Hospital ED. Regardless of the chief reason for the ED visit, 23.2 percent of the teens reported current symptoms consistent with PTSD, 13.9 percent had moderate or higher depressive symptoms and 11.3 percent reported suicidal thoughts within the past year. The adolescents commonly reported physical peer violence (46.5 percent), cyberbullying (46.7 percent) and exposure to community violence (58.9 percent).

“PTSD in adolescents has been associated with long-term functional impairment, including poor physical health, academic failure and increased need for medical services,” said Ranney, an emergency medicine physician at Hasbro Children’s Hospital. “But, despite the availability of effective treatment, PTSD is currently underdiagnosed, underreported and undertreated, especially among children and adolescents.”

The study found that the PTSD symptoms strongly correlated with a variety of co-occurring risk exposures, such as being a victim of cyberbullying or physical peer violence, exposure to community violence and alcohol or drug use. Few of the teens with PTSD reported receiving any mental health care in the past year.

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“These results should serve as a reminder to parents, schools and physicians that these problems are prevalent in our community,” said Ranney. “This study also highlights that teens with a history of cyberbullying or peer violence are more likely to have PTSD, which is a very treatable disease if properly identified and addressed.”

Previous studies have suggested that EDs should screen adolescents for psychiatric disorders, given the large number of high-risk adolescents seen in the ED and its role as a liaison to community mental health services. “The problem is that there has been a lack of knowledge about the prevalence and impact of PTSD in adolescent emergency patients, particularly among patients who are not presenting in the aftermath of an obviously traumatic event,” said Ranney.

“Existing literature on PTSD in adolescent emergency patients describes its development after an acute assault or motor vehicle crash,” said Ranney. “But, this study highlights the need for improved efforts at more standardized mental health evaluation, possibly even screening for PTSD regardless of the reason for a teen’s visit to the ED.”

Ranney hopes this study will lead to greater attention to PTSD and its co-occurring risk factors in adolescent ED patients, as the disease is well-known to impact adolescents’ long-term quality of life, and is unlikely to improve without treatment.

For more information on PTSD in children and teens and how to help a child who may be affected by PTSD, visit www.bradleyhospital.org/posttraumatic-stress-disorder-in-children-and-teens.html.

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