Health-risk behaviors among a sample of US pre-adolescents: Types, frequency, and predictive factors

被引:17
|
作者
Riesch, Susan K. [1 ]
Kedrowski, Karen [2 ]
Brown, Roger L. [1 ]
Temkin, Barbara Myers [3 ]
Wang, Kevin [1 ]
Henriques, Jeffrey [4 ]
Jacobson, Gloria [5 ]
Giustino-Kluba, Nina
机构
[1] Univ Wisconsin Madison, Sch Nursing, Madison, WI 53706 USA
[2] Univ Wisconsin Madison, Sch Med & Publ Hlth, Madison, WI USA
[3] Univ Wisconsin Madison, Waisman Ctr, Madison, WI USA
[4] Univ Wisconsin Madison, Dept Psychol, Madison, WI USA
[5] St Xavier Univ, Sch Nursing, Chicago, IL USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Pre-adolescents; Health risk behaviors; Youth; family; and environment factors; BICYCLE HELMET USE; UNITED-STATES; TOBACCO USE; DRUG-USE; YOUTH; ADOLESCENTS; COMMUNICATION; SURVEILLANCE; VALIDITY; ALCOHOL;
D O I
10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2012.10.012
中图分类号
R47 [护理学];
学科分类号
1011 ;
摘要
Background: Children as young as 10 years old report curiosity and participation in health-risk behaviors, yet most studies focus upon adolescent samples. Objective: To document the types and frequencies of health risk behavior among pre-adolescents and to examine the child, family, and environment factors that predict them. Method: A sample of 297 pre-adolescents (mean age = 10.5, SD = 0.6) from two Midwestern US cities and their parents (child parent dyads) provided data about demographic characteristics, health risk behavior participation, child self-esteem, child pubertal development, child and adult perception of their neighborhood, and parent monitoring. Their participation was at intake to a 5-year clustered randomized controlled trial. Results: Pre-adolescents participated in an average of 3.7 health-risk behaviors (SD = 2.0), primarily those that lead to unintentional (helmet and seatbelt use) and intentional (feeling unsafe, having something stolen, and physical fighting) injury. Factors predictive of unintentional injury risk behavior were self-esteem, pubertal development, parent monitoring, and parent perception of the neighborhood environment. Boys were 1.8 times less likely than girls to use helmets and seatbelts. Pre-adolescents whose parents were not partnered were 2.8 times more likely than pre-adolescents whose parents were partnered to report intentional risk behavior. Recommendations: These data demonstrate trends that cannot be ignored. We recommend, focused specifically upon boys and non-partnered families that (a) developmentally appropriate, appealing prevention messages be developed and delivered for parents and pre-adolescents and community interventions targeting both parent and pre-adolescent together be provided to help them establish and monitor behavioral expectations and (b) organized nursing endorse policy in the US and globally that assures adequate family environments for children. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1067 / 1079
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] HEALTH-RISK BEHAVIORS IN EARLY ADOLESCENTS ADMITTED FOR PSYCHIATRIC CARE
    Brew, E. A.
    Dumas, S.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE MEDICINE, 2019, 67 (02) : 576 - 576
  • [22] Fathering pregnancies: Marking health-risk behaviors in urban adolescents
    Guagliardo, MF
    Huang, ZH
    D'Angelo, LJ
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ADOLESCENT HEALTH, 1999, 24 (01) : 10 - 15
  • [23] Sedentary Behavior, Psychosocial Stress Indicators, and Health-Risk Behaviors Among Adolescents in Northeastern Brazil
    de Almeida Silva, Fabiana Medeiros
    Menezes, Aldemir Smith
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY & HEALTH, 2018, 15 (03): : 169 - 175
  • [24] Association between pubertal status and pre-adolescents' risk behaviors and caregivers' parenting behaviors and attitudes
    Rose, A
    Koo, HP
    Anderson, KM
    Walker, LR
    Bhaskar, B
    Yao, Q
    [J]. PEDIATRIC RESEARCH, 2004, 55 (04) : 13A - 13A
  • [25] Associations of health-risk behaviors with mental health among Chinese children
    Zhang, Jie
    Liu, Ming-Wei
    Yu, Hong-Jie
    Chen, Qiu-Tong
    Tang, Bo-Wen
    Yuan, Shuai
    He, Qi-Qiang
    [J]. PSYCHOLOGY HEALTH & MEDICINE, 2022, 27 (03) : 528 - 536
  • [26] Association of health-risk behaviors and depressive symptoms and anxiety symptoms: a school-based sample of Chinese adolescents
    Luo, Xiaomin
    Zhou, Yu
    Zheng, Ruimin
    Li, Xin
    Dai, Yue
    Narayan, Anuradha
    Huang, Xiaona
    Tian, Xiaobo
    Jin, Xi
    Mei, Lili
    Xie, Xinyan
    Gu, Huaiting
    Hou, Fang
    Liu, Lingfei
    Luo, Xiu
    Meng, Heng
    Zhang, Jiajia
    Song, Ranran
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2020, 42 (03) : E189 - E198
  • [27] Internal associations among health-risk factors and risk prevalence
    Braunstein, A
    Hirschland, D
    McDonald, T
    Edington, DW
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH BEHAVIOR, 2001, 25 (04) : 407 - 417
  • [28] Prevalence of health-risk behaviors in adolescents with cancer: Implications for second malignancies
    Carpentier, Melissa Y.
    Mullins, Larry L.
    Elkin, T. David
    Wolfe-Christensen, Cortney
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ADOLESCENT HEALTH, 2008, 42 (02) : S20 - S20
  • [29] Role models, ethnic identity, and health-risk behaviors in urban adolescents
    Yancey, AK
    Siegel, JM
    McDaniel, KL
    [J]. ARCHIVES OF PEDIATRICS & ADOLESCENT MEDICINE, 2002, 156 (01): : 55 - 61
  • [30] Adverse Childhood Experiences and Health-Risk Behaviors in Vulnerable Early Adolescents
    Garrido, Edward F.
    Weiler, Lindsey M.
    Taussig, Heather N.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EARLY ADOLESCENCE, 2018, 38 (05): : 661 - 680