Abstract
Children’s mental health issues can have a lasting effect into adulthood, including enhanced risks for their social and emotional development, as well as their academic performance and overall behavior. Worldwide nearly 1 billion children are affected by the bullying phenomenon, with social, emotional, and economic consequences. In this vein, our study aimed to analyze the effect of the therapeutic game REThink on the improvement of emotion regulation abilities and the reduction of both bullying behavior and victimization in primary school children. Our sample consisted of 75 children who were voluntarily enrolled by their parents, and randomly assigned to the intervention group (n = 38) or to the control group (n = 37). They completed the baseline assessment consisting of emotion regulation, irrationality, bullying and victimization behavior measurements, then the children from the intervention group played the therapeutic game REThink. Four weeks later, after completing each level twice, every participant had completed the same questionnaires at the post-test assessment. The results indicated significant changes across victimization for children who were exposed to verbal, physical or social bullying, increased emotional control and lower levels of irrationality, low frustration tolerance to work and demandingness, with small to medium effect size improvements for the REThink game group compared to the control group. The REThink therapeutic game proved to be a promising intervention tool for reducing victimization effects and irrationality, and improving emotion regulation abilities in primary school children. Future research could improve on these results by addressing the timeline stability limit.
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