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      Influence of childhood trauma on adolescent internet addiction: The mediating roles of loneliness and negative coping styles

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          Abstract

          BACKGROUND

          In the information age, the use of the internet and multimedia tools has large effects on the life of middle school students. Improper use of the internet may result in internet addiction (IA). Thus, actively exploring the factors influencing adolescent and the mechanism of addiction as well as promoting adolescent physical and mental health and academic development are priorities that families, schools, and society urgently need to address.

          AIM

          To explore the effect of childhood trauma on adolescent IA and to consider the roles of loneliness and negative coping styles.

          METHODS

          A total of 11310 students from six junior high schools in Henan, China, completed the child trauma questionnaire, IA test, loneliness scale, and simple coping style questionnaire. In addition, data were collected from 1044 adolescents with childhood trauma for analysis with IBM SPSS 26.0 and AMOS 28.0; we examined the relationships among childhood trauma, IA, loneliness, and negative coping styles.

          RESULTS

          We found that childhood trauma not only directly affected adolescents’ IA but also affected IA through loneliness and negative coping styles.

          CONCLUSION

          Therefore, this study has theoretical implications regarding adolescent mental health and may inform interventions for IA.

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          Most cited references76

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          Common method biases in behavioral research: A critical review of the literature and recommended remedies.

          Interest in the problem of method biases has a long history in the behavioral sciences. Despite this, a comprehensive summary of the potential sources of method biases and how to control for them does not exist. Therefore, the purpose of this article is to examine the extent to which method biases influence behavioral research results, identify potential sources of method biases, discuss the cognitive processes through which method biases influence responses to measures, evaluate the many different procedural and statistical techniques that can be used to control method biases, and provide recommendations for how to select appropriate procedural and statistical remedies for different types of research settings.
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            Loneliness matters: a theoretical and empirical review of consequences and mechanisms.

            As a social species, humans rely on a safe, secure social surround to survive and thrive. Perceptions of social isolation, or loneliness, increase vigilance for threat and heighten feelings of vulnerability while also raising the desire to reconnect. Implicit hypervigilance for social threat alters psychological processes that influence physiological functioning, diminish sleep quality, and increase morbidity and mortality. The purpose of this paper is to review the features and consequences of loneliness within a comprehensive theoretical framework that informs interventions to reduce loneliness. We review physical and mental health consequences of loneliness, mechanisms for its effects, and effectiveness of extant interventions. Features of a loneliness regulatory loop are employed to explain cognitive, behavioral, and physiological consequences of loneliness and to discuss interventions to reduce loneliness. Loneliness is not simply being alone. Interventions to reduce loneliness and its health consequences may need to take into account its attentional, confirmatory, and memorial biases as well as its social and behavioral effects.
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              Initial reliability and validity of a new retrospective measure of child abuse and neglect.

              This report presents initial findings on the reliability and validity of a new retrospective measure of child abuse and neglect, the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire. Two hundred eighty-six drug- or alcohol-dependent patients were given the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire as part of a larger test battery, and 40 of these patients were given the questionnaire again after an interval of 2 to 6 months. Sixty-eight of the patients were also given a structured interview for child abuse and neglect, the Childhood Trauma Interview, that was developed by the authors. Principal-components analysis of responses on the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire yielded four rotated orthogonal factors: physical and emotional abuse, emotional neglect, sexual abuse, and physical neglect. Cronbach's alpha for the factors ranged from 0.79 to 0.94, indicating high internal consistency. The Childhood Trauma Questionnaire also demonstrated good test-retest reliability over a 2- to 6-month interval (intraclass correlation = 0.88), as well as convergence with the Childhood Trauma Interview, indicating that patients' reports of child abuse and neglect based on the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire were highly stable, both over time and across type of instruments. These findings provide strong initial support for the reliability and validity of the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                World J Psychiatry
                WJP
                World Journal of Psychiatry
                Baishideng Publishing Group Inc
                2220-3206
                19 December 2023
                19 December 2023
                : 13
                : 12
                : 1133-1144
                Affiliations
                College of Nursing and Health, Institute of Nursing and Health, Henan University, Kaifeng 475000, Henan Province, China
                College of Nursing and Health, Institute of Nursing and Health, Henan University, Kaifeng 475000, Henan Province, China
                College of Nursing and Health, Institute of Nursing and Health, Henan University, Kaifeng 475000, Henan Province, China
                College of Nursing and Health, Institute of Nursing and Health, Henan University, Kaifeng 475000, Henan Province, China
                School of Business, Institute of Business Administration, Henan University, Kaifeng 475000, Henan Province, China
                College of Nursing and Health, Institute of Nursing and Health, Henan University, Kaifeng 475000, Henan Province, China. kfccr@ 123456126.com
                Author notes

                Co-first authors: Wang-Lin Dong and Yuan-Yuan Li.

                Author contributions: Dong WL wrote the first draft of the manuscript; Dong WL, Li YY, Zhang YM, Peng QW, and Lu GL were responsible for the analysis and interpretation of data; Chen CR directed all the work.

                Corresponding author: Chao-Ran Chen, Doctor, PhD, Professor, College of Nursing and Health, Institute of Nursing and Health, Henan University, Jinming Avenue, Kaifeng 475000, Henan Province, China. kfccr@ 123456126.com

                Article
                jWJP.v13.i12.pg1133 87698
                10.5498/wjp.v13.i12.1133
                10768484
                1d9e48e6-f8fa-482f-a6b5-87ea1d02b1c6
                ©The Author(s) 2023. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.

                This article is an open-access article that was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial.

                History
                : 23 August 2023
                : 18 October 2023
                : 21 November 2023
                Categories
                Observational Study

                addictive behavior,mental health,coping styles,trauma,loneliness

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