The research was aimed to examine the outcome of peer victimization on physical and psychological health of schools, colleges and madrasa students. Multistage stratified random sampling was employed to select a cross-sectional research design on various educational institutes of city Gujranwala (n=600). They used three sets of questionnaires to evaluate the outcomes i.e., Multidimensional Peer-Victimization Scale-24 (Joseph and Stockton, 2018), SF-36 Questionnaire (Ware and Sherbourne, 1992) and Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (Spitzer, Kroenke and Williams, 1999). Research examined whether peer victimization positively correlated with mental and physical health (rs=.40, p<.001 and rs=.17, p<.001). Mann Whitney U test indicated significant differences overall that Female had worse victims in comparison to male students and the females were more and more physically and mentally disturbed than the males were. Krushail Wallis test demonstrated that students of madrasas recorded first rank of peer victimization then college and school students respectively.
Shahzadi⃰ et al. (Sun,) studied this question.