000 03434nam a2200493Ia 4500
001 113776
005 20250625151218.0
008 110331s2007 eng
020 _a0473112345 (pbk.)
040 _aWSS
_dAFV
082 0 _a613.0433 YOU
100 _91159
_aFleming, Terry M.
245 _aViolence and New Zealand young people :
_bfindings of Youth2000 - a national secondary school youth health and wellbeing survey
_cFleming, T.M.; Watson, Peter D.; Robinson, Elizabeth; Ameratunga, Shanthi; Dixon, Robyn; Clark, T. C.; Crengle, Sue
260 _aAuckland
_bUniversity of Auckland. Adolescent Health Research Group
_c2007
300 _a44 p. ; 30 cm. ; computer file : PDF format : computer file : World Wide Web
365 _a00
_b0
500 _aYouth2000 survey series
500 _aBibliography p. 31. Also available on the World Wide Web. Report commissioned and funded by The Public Health Directorate, Ministry of Health. NZFVC Keywords: Survey findings; Mixed method; Youth2000 survey; NZSC Age 1995 5-14, 15-19
520 _aThis report presents results from a survey of New Zealand secondary school students' experience of violence. Violence is defined as witnessing violence at home, bullying at school, being a victim or a perpetrator of violence. The report presents the characteristics of these experiences (who committed the violence against whom) and how bad the students considered this to be. The report also provides data on the frequency of violent events and health issues associated with the violence. The data was collected as part of Youth2000, a self-reported anonymous survey undertaken in New Zealand secondary schools in 2001; 9,699 randomly selected year 9-13 students from 114 randomly selected schools participated in the survey.The principal findings of the research were: Violence is commonly experienced by many young New Zealanders and is associated with many health issues; exposure to domestic violence is particularly disturbing for young people and is associated with serious health outcomes; a significant number of young people feel unsafe at school and many young people who experience violence do not access service or receive support. Drawing on these findings, the authors provide recommendations for different groups: young people, parents and families, schools, health and social services, funders and policy makers.
522 _anz
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aADOLESCENTS
_943
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aCHILDREN
_9127
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aEDUCATION
_9218
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aHEALTH
_9283
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aMENTAL HEALTH
_9377
650 2 7 _2FVC
_aSTATISTICS
_9575
650 2 7 _aVIOLENCE
_9629
650 2 7 _9130
_aCHILD EXPOSURE TO VIOLENCE
650 2 7 _aYOUNG PEOPLE
_9660
650 2 7 _aYOUTH2000
_96084
651 4 _aNEW ZEALAND
_92588
650 2 7 _9103
_aCHILD ABUSE
700 1 _aWatson, Peter D.
_92291
700 1 _aRobinson, Elizabeth
_92019
700 1 _aAmeratunga, Shanthi
_9706
700 1 _aDixon, Robyn
_91057
700 1 _aCrengle, Sue
_9996
710 2 _aUniversity of Auckland. Adolescent Health Research Group
_92414
700 _aClark, Terryann C.
_92412
830 _aYouth2000 survey series
_96062
856 4 _uhttps://cdn.auckland.ac.nz/assets/fmhs/faculty/ahrg/docs/2001-violence-nz-yp-web.pdf
856 4 _uhttps://www.fmhs.auckland.ac.nz/en/faculty/adolescent-health-research-group.html
_zAccess the website
942 _2ddc
_cREPORT
999 _c2624
_d2624