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Featured researches published by Katrine Rich Madsen.


BMC Public Health | 2014

Perceived problems with computer gaming and internet use among adolescents: measurement tool for non-clinical survey studies.

Bjørn Evald Holstein; Trine Pagh Pedersen; Pernille Bendtsen; Katrine Rich Madsen; Charlotte Meilstrup; Line Nielsen; Mette Rasmussen

BackgroundExisting instruments for measuring problematic computer and console gaming and internet use are often lengthy and often based on a pathological perspective. The objective was to develop and present a new and short non-clinical measurement tool for perceived problems related to computer use and gaming among adolescents and to study the association between screen time and perceived problems.MethodsCross-sectional school-survey of 11-, 13-, and 15-year old students in thirteen schools in the City of Aarhus, Denmark, participation rate 89%, n = 2100. The main exposure was time spend on weekdays on computer- and console-gaming and internet use for communication and surfing. The outcome measures were three indexes on perceived problems related to computer and console gaming and internet use.ResultsThe three new indexes showed high face validity and acceptable internal consistency. Most schoolchildren with high screen time did not experience problems related to computer use. Still, there was a strong and graded association between time use and perceived problems related to computer gaming, console gaming (only boys) and internet use, odds ratios ranging from 6.90 to 10.23.ConclusionThe three new measures of perceived problems related to computer and console gaming and internet use among adolescents are appropriate, reliable and valid for use in non-clinical surveys about young people’s everyday life and behaviour. These new measures do not assess Internet Gaming Disorder as it is listed in the DSM and therefore has no parity with DSM criteria. We found an increasing risk of perceived problems with increasing time spent with gaming and internet use. Nevertheless, most schoolchildren who spent much time with gaming and internet use did not experience problems.


Scandinavian Journal of Public Health | 2015

Socioeconomic differences in emotional symptoms among adolescents in the Nordic countries: Recommendations on how to present inequality

Line Nielsen; Mogens Trab Damsgaard; Charlotte Meilstrup; Pernille Due; Katrine Rich Madsen; Vibeke Koushede; Bjørn Evald Holstein

Aims: This comparative study examines absolute and relative socioeconomic differences in emotional symptoms among adolescents using standardised data from five Nordic countries and gives recommendations on how to present socioeconomic inequality. Methods: The Health Behaviour in School-aged Children (HBSC) international cross-sectional study from 2005/2006 provided data on 29,642 11–15-year-old adolescents from nationally random samples in Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden. The outcome was daily emotional symptoms. Family Affluence Scale (FAS) was used as indicator of socioeconomic position. We applied four summary measures of inequality: Prevalence Difference, Odds Ratio, Slope Index of Inequality and Relative Index of Inequality, and presented the socioeconomic inequality by a graphical illustration of the prevalence of emotional symptoms, the size of the FAS groups and the summary indices of inequality in each country. Results: The prevalence of emotional symptoms ranged from 8.1% in Denmark to 13.2% in Iceland. There were large country variations in the size of the low FAS-group ranging from 2% in Iceland to 12% in Finland. The largest absolute and relative socioeconomic inequalities were found in Iceland and the smallest in Finland for girls and in Denmark for boys. Conclusions: Emotional symptoms were more common among Nordic adolescents from low affluence families. This association appeared in the study of both absolute and relative inequality. A comprehensive presentation of socioeconomic inequality should include the prevalence of the health outcome, the size of the socioeconomic groups, and the regression line representing the summary indices of inequality.


Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies | 2016

Loneliness, immigration background and self-identified ethnicity: a nationally representative study of adolescents in Denmark

Katrine Rich Madsen; Mogens Trab Damsgaard; Signe Smith Jervelund; Ulla Christensen; Gonneke W. J. M. Stevens; Sophie D. Walsh; Vibeke Koushede; Line Nielsen; Pernille Due; Bjørn Evald Holstein

ABSTRACT Migration is an increasing worldwide phenomenon that creates multicultural societies with a growing number of adolescents who have experienced a process of migration or who have an ethnic background other than that of the majority. Migration may lead to loss of social relations and create challenges related to acculturation in the new country. These experiences may induce feelings of loneliness. Research on ethnic and migrant disparities in loneliness among adolescents is limited and inconsistent. The purpose of this study was to examine how adolescents’ immigration background and self-identified ethnicity are associated, independently and combined, with loneliness. We used data from the Danish 2010 Health Behaviour in School-aged Children survey which included a representative sample of 3083 13- and 15-year-olds. The results suggest that immigrants but not descendants of immigrants have an increased risk of loneliness compared to adolescents with a Danish origin. The results also suggest that adolescents’ self-identified ethnicity plays an essential role but differently for immigrants and descendants: identifying with the Danish majority was protective against loneliness among immigrants, whereas identifying with an ethnic minority group was protective against loneliness among descendants.


Scandinavian Journal of Public Health | 2018

Increasing prevalence of emotional symptoms in higher socioeconomic strata: Trend study among Danish schoolchildren 1991–2014

Pernille Due; Mogens Trab Damsgaard; Katrine Rich Madsen; Line Nielsen; Signe Lynne Boe Rayce; Bjørn Evald Holstein

Aims: The aims of this study were: (a) to examine trends in daily emotional symptoms among 11- to 15-year-olds from 1991 to 2014 in Denmark, and (b) to examine trends in social inequality in daily emotional symptoms, that is, whether the differences in prevalence between adolescents with parents of varying occupational social class changed over time. Methods: We combined seven comparable cross-sectional Health Behaviour in School-aged Children surveys (N=31,169). Daily emotional symptoms were measured by the HBSC Symptom Check List and occupational social class (OSC) by students’ reports about parents’ occupation. We calculated absolute (per cent) differences in emotional symptoms between high and low OSC and relative differences by odds ratio for emotional symptoms by parents’ OSC. Results: Eight per cent reported at least one daily emotional symptoms, with an increasing trend from 1991 to 2014 (p<0.001). The prevalence in high, middle and low OSC was 6.2%, 7.4% and 10.6% (p<0.0001). From 1991 to 2014, there was an increase in the prevalence of daily emotional symptoms in high (p<0.0001) and middle (p<0.0001) but not low OSC (p=0.4404). This resulted in a diminishing absolute social inequality in emotional symptoms. The statistical interaction between OSC and survey year was significant (p=0.0023) and suggests a diminishing relative social inequality in emotional symptoms from 1991 to 2014. Conclusions: There was an increasing prevalence of daily emotional symptoms from 1991 to 2014 and a diminishing social inequality in prevalence of daily emotional symptoms in terms of both absolute and relative social inequality.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2015

An Internationally Comparative Study of Immigration and Adolescent Emotional and Behavioral Problems : Effects of Generation and Gender

Gonneke W. J. M. Stevens; Sophie D. Walsh; Tim Huijts; Marlies Maes; Katrine Rich Madsen; F. R. Cavallo; Michal Molcho


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2016

The relationship between immigrant school composition, classmate support and involvement in physical fighting and bullying among adolescent immigrants and non-immigrants in 11 countries

Sophie D. Walsh; Bart De Clercq; Michal Molcho; Yossi Harel-Fisch; Colleen Davison; Katrine Rich Madsen; Gonneke W. J. M. Stevens


International Journal of Public Health | 2015

Perceived problems with computer gaming and Internet use are associated with poorer social relations in adolescence

Mette Rasmussen; Charlotte Meilstrup; Pernille Bendtsen; Trine Pagh Pedersen; Line Nielsen; Katrine Rich Madsen; Bjørn Evald Holstein


International Journal of Public Health | 2014

Close relations to parents and emotional symptoms among adolescents: beyond socio-economic impact?

Mogens Trab Damsgaard; Bjørn Evald Holstein; Vibeke Koushede; Katrine Rich Madsen; Charlotte Meilstrup; Malene Kubstrup Nelausen; Line Nielsen; Signe Lynne Boe Rayce


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2016

Loneliness and Ethnic Composition of the School Class: A Nationally Random Sample of Adolescents

Katrine Rich Madsen; Mogens Trab Damsgaard; Mark Rubin; Signe Smith Jervelund; Mathias Lasgaard; Sophie D. Walsh; Gonneke W. J. M. Stevens; Bjørn Evald Holstein


Journal of Public Health | 2018

Trends in social inequality in loneliness among adolescents 1991–2014

Katrine Rich Madsen; Bjørn Evald Holstein; Mogens Trab Damsgaard; S B Rayce; Louise Norman Jespersen; Pernille Due

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Bjørn Evald Holstein

University of Southern Denmark

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Pernille Due

University of Southern Denmark

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Rikke Krølner

University of Southern Denmark

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Line Nielsen

University of Southern Denmark

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Mette Toftager

University of Southern Denmark

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Mogens Trab Damsgaard

University of Southern Denmark

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Charlotte Meilstrup

University of Southern Denmark

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