scholarly journals ANALISIS PENGARUH MEDIA INTERNET TERHADAP PERILAKU PENYIMPANGAN SEKSUAL PADA REMAJA DI SMP NEGERI 4 TEBING TINGGI

2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 54-61
Author(s):  
Maximilianus Dasril Samura ◽  
Cempaka Sari

The progress of the application of internet media technology among teenagers makes teenagers spend a lot of time useless, so that few teenagers have experience changes in communication, ethics, and behavior, even increasing sexual deviance behavior. The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of internet media on sexual deviance behavior in adolescents of SMP Negeri 4 Tebing Tinggi in 2019. This type of research uses a cross-sectional method. The population in this study was 90 students. The results show that there is an influence on the frequency of internet media usage on adolescent sexual deviation behavior. There is an effect of the duration of internet media usage on adolescent sexual deviation behavior. There is the influence of internet media access used on adolescent sexual deviation behavior, and the variable that most influences the behavior of adolescent sexual deviation is the variable frequency of using internet media with prevalency ratio 3.501. It expected that adolescents do not use the facilities and internet media their have for pornography. Besides, teenagers should be positive things in their spare time, such as taking school extracurricular activities, exercising, or did good hobbies to avoid deviant behavior.  

2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 50-56
Author(s):  
Maximilianus Dasril Samura ◽  
Cempaka Sari

The progress of the application of internet media technology among teenagers makes teenagersspend a lot of time useless, so that few teenagers have experience changes in communication,ethics, and behavior, even increasing sexual deviance behavior. The purpose of this study was todetermine the effect of internet media on sexual deviance behavior in adolescents of SMP Negeri 4Tebing Tinggi in 2019. This type of research uses a cross-sectional method. The population in thisstudy was 90 students. The results show that there is an influence on the frequency of internetmedia usage on adolescent sexual deviation behavior. There is an effect of the duration of internetmedia usage on adolescent sexual deviation behavior. There is the influence of internet mediaaccess used on adolescent sexual deviation behavior, and the variable that most influences thebehavior of adolescent sexual deviation is the variable frequency of using internet media withprevalency ratio 3.501. It expected that adolescents do not use the facilities and internet mediatheir have for pornography. Besides, teenagers should be positive things in their spare time, suchas taking school extracurricular activities, exercising, or did good hobbies to avoid deviantbehavior.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 106
Author(s):  
Khalid Sultan ◽  
Mirza Jan ◽  
Muhammad Imran Khan

This cross-sectional survey explores the Pakistani TV channels and cultivation of politics. It discusses the voters’ attitude and behavior. There are number of media outlets in Pakistan. Media technology especially TV is the most influential medium that shape the trends of the audience. This time 83 private news channels are working in Pakistan. Cultivation of political thoughts is influenced according to exposure to television. An individual’s likelihood of receiving political information is a function of cognitive engagement with politics.Keywords: Cultivation, TV, News Channels, Politics


2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 18
Author(s):  
Achmad Anwar Abidin ◽  
Muammar Luthfi

Experts say sexual deviation is caused by several factors including hormone disorder, genetic potential, environmental factors and also improper sex education. Education also contributes to the occurrence of sexual perversion. Therefore, proper sex education at an early age is necessary to prevent sexual deviant behavior. Sexual deviance behavior is a disease that can be known if the patient is already Mumayiz or legally baligh for the needs of one's sex began to be felt. due to there are many people suffered from sexual deviance behavior, then we should be able to detect and prevent them early.


Crisis ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 134-140 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher R. DeCou ◽  
Stephanie P. Kaplan ◽  
Julie Spencer ◽  
Shannon M. Lynch

Abstract. Background and Aim: This study evaluated trauma-related shame as a mediator of the association between sexual assault severity and perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness. Method: A total of 164 female undergraduates who reported attempted or completed sexual assault completed self-report measures of sexual assault, trauma-related shame, perceived burdensomeness, and thwarted belongingness. Results: Using path analysis, trauma-related shame mediated the association between sexual assault severity and perceived burdensomeness, and between sexual assault severity and thwarted belongingness. Limitations: The findings of this study are limited by the retrospective, self-report, and cross-sectional nature of these data, and do not allow for causal inference. Conclusion: Trauma-related shame warrants additional investigation as a mechanism that explains the association between sexual assault and psychosocial risk factors for suicidal ideation and behavior.


Author(s):  
Mohamed N. Al Arifi ◽  
Abdulrahman Alwhaibi

Objective: Fever alone can lead to rare serious complications in children, such as febrile seizures. The aim of this study is to assess the knowledge, beliefs, and behavior of parents toward fever and its management. Methods: A cross-sectional study using an online questionnaire was applied over a period of 3 months, from January to March 2018, to parents who were living in Saudi Arabia. The inclusion criteria were a parent who is a resident of Saudi Arabia, with at least one child aged 6 years or less, while incomplete questionnaires, having a child aged more than 6 years, or parents who were not living in Saudi Arabia were excluded. Results: A total of 656 parents completed the questionnaire. More than two-thirds of the subjects were female, the majority of whom were aged between 25–33 years old. The best-reported place to measure the temperature of children was the armpit (46%), followed by the ear (28%) and the mouth (10.7%). More than half of the parents considered their children feverish at a temperature of 38 °C. The majority of parents (79.7%) reported that the most serious side effects of fever were seizure, brain damage (39.3%), coma (29.9%), dehydration (29.7%), and death (25%). The most common method used to measure a child’s temperature was an electronic thermometer (62.3%). The most common antipyretic was paracetamol (84.5%). Conclusions: Our study demonstrates the good knowledge of parents in identifying a feverish temperature using the recommended route and tools for measuring body temperature.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 205630512098445
Author(s):  
Nora Kirkizh ◽  
Olessia Koltsova

Availability of alternative information through social media, in particular, and digital media, in general, is often said to induce social discontent, especially in states where traditional media are under government control. But does this relation really exist, and is it generalizable? This article explores the relationship between self-reported online news consumption and protest participation across 48 nations in 2010–2014. Based on multilevel regression models and simulations, the analysis provides evidence that those respondents who reported that they had attended a protest at least once read news online daily or weekly. The study also shows that the magnitude of the effect varies depending on the political context: surprisingly, despite supposedly unlimited control of offline and online media, autocratic countries demonstrated higher effects of online news than transitional regimes, where the Internet media are relatively uninhibited.


2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 53-57
Author(s):  
Md Zahir Uddin ◽  
Muhammad Zillur Rahman Khan ◽  
Mumita Jerin Nilav ◽  
Md Faruq Alam ◽  
Md Abdul Mohit

Psychotherapy for child and adolescent with psychiatric disorder is relatively a newer concept in Bangladesh. This cross sectional study was done to determine the pattern of psychotherapy provided by the psychotherapy department for children and adolescents with psychiatric disorder in National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) from June 2010 to November 2014. Total 121 samples were taken purposefully from the records of psychotherapy department where data were collected retrospectively using check list. Results showed that among respondents more were boys than girls (64.5% vs. 35.5%) whereas their mean (±SD) age was 12.1 (±3.2) years. Majority (47.9%) of them were within class six to class ten. Most of the respondents (89%) were referred from the outpatient department and 11% were referred by inpatient department. Conduct disorder (27.3%), conversion disorder (13.2%), attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (12.4%) and intellectual developmental disorder (9.1%) were common diagnoses of the respondents. It was found that 74.4% respondents attended up to one to five psychotherapy sessions and cognitive behavior therapy (38%) and behavior therapy (25.6%) were most commonly used psychotherapy. Though 60.3% of the respondents improved to certain extent in psychotherapy sessions, patient’s dropout rate was found as 55.4%.Bang J Psychiatry Dec 2014; 28(2): 53-57


2017 ◽  
Vol 71 (2) ◽  
pp. 245-280 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ranjit Lall

AbstractInternational organizations (IOs) have long been a central focus of scholarship in international relations, yet we know remarkably little about their performance. This article offers an explanation for differences in the performance of IOs and tests it using the first quantitative data set on the topic. I argue that the primary obstacle to effective institutional performance is not deviant behavior by IO officials—as conventional “rogue-agency” analyses suggest—but the propensity of states to use IOs to promote narrow national interests rather than broader organizational objectives. IOs that enjoy policy autonomy vis-à-vis states will thus exhibit higher levels of performance. However, in the international context policy autonomy cannot be guaranteed by institutional design. Instead, it is a function of (1) the existence of (certain types of) institutionalized alliances between IOs and actors above and below the state; and (2) the technical complexity of IO activities. I provide empirical evidence for the argument by constructing and analyzing a cross-sectional data set on IO performance—based in part on a new wave of official government evaluations of IOs and in part on an original survey of IO staff—and conducting a comparative case study in the realm of global food security.


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