Peer victimization, internalizing problems, and the buffering role of friendship quality: disaggregating between- and within-person associations

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SUMMARY

    Peer victimization is more strongly associated with depressive symptoms than with anxiety (Hawker and amp; Boulton, 2000), and there is some evidence that the link between peer victimization and anxiety is bidirectional, whereas the link between peer victimization and depressive symptoms is not (Sentse et_al, 2017). Some studies found a buffering effect of friend support (e_g, Cuadros and amp; Berger, 2016; Lim et_al, 2011), but others found that victimization was associated with internalizing problems regardless of support (e_g, Brendgen and amp; Poulin, 2018; Davidson and amp; Demaray, 2007), or that the buffering effect was . . .

     

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