School Connectedness and Risk Behaviors and Experiences Among High School Students - Youth Risk Behavior Survey, United States, 2021.

Q1 Medicine MMWR supplements Pub Date : 2023-04-28 DOI:10.15585/mmwr.su7201a2
Natalie J Wilkins, Kathleen H Krause, Jorge V Verlenden, Leigh E Szucs, Emily N Ussery, Christopher T Allen, Joi Stinson, Shannon L Michael, Kathleen A Ethier
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

School connectedness, defined as students' belief that adults and peers in their school care about their learning as well as about them as persons, has been linked to positive educational, behavioral, and health outcomes in adolescence and into adulthood. Data from the 2021 nationally representative Youth Risk Behavior Survey, conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic, were used to estimate prevalence of students' perception of school connectedness and examine associations between school connectedness and seven risk behaviors and experiences: poor mental health, marijuana use, prescription opioid misuse, sexual intercourse, unprotected sex, experiencing forced sex, and missing school because of feeling unsafe. Prevalence estimates were generated and pairwise t-tests were used to detect differences among student subpopulations by sex, grade, race and ethnicity, and sexual identity; Wald chi-square tests were used to detect differences in risk behaviors by level of connectedness within a subpopulation. Logistic regression models were used to estimate prevalence ratios comparing the prevalence of risk behaviors and experiences of students with high connectedness with students with low connectedness, stratified by demographics. During 2021, 61.5% of U.S. high school students reported feeling connected to others at school. In addition, school connectedness was associated with lower prevalence of every risk behavior and experience examined in this study, although certain associations differed by race and ethnicity and sexual identity (e.g., school connectedness was associated with better mental health outcomes for youths with heterosexual, bisexual, and questioning or other sexual identities, but not for youths who identified as lesbian or gay). These findings can guide public health interventions that promote youth well-being by creating school environments where all youths have a sense of belonging and feel they are cared for and supported.

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高中学生的学校联系与风险行为和经验-青少年风险行为调查,美国,2021。
学校联系被定义为学生相信学校里的成年人和同龄人关心他们的学习以及他们作为一个人,这与青春期和成年期的积极教育、行为和健康结果有关。在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间进行的2021年全国代表性青年风险行为调查的数据用于估计学生对学校连通性的看法的普遍程度,并研究学校连通性与七种风险行为和经历之间的关联:精神健康状况不佳、大麻使用、处方阿片类药物滥用、性交、无保护的性行为、经历强迫性行为和因感觉不安全而缺课。生成了患病率估计值,并使用两两t检验来检测学生亚群在性别、年级、种族和民族以及性别认同方面的差异;沃尔德卡方检验用于通过亚群体内的连通性水平来检测危险行为的差异。使用逻辑回归模型来估计流行率,比较高连通性学生和低连通性学生的危险行为和经历的流行率,并按人口统计学分层。在2021年,61.5%的美国高中生报告说他们在学校里与他人有联系。此外,学校连通性与本研究中检查的每种风险行为和经历的患病率较低有关,尽管某些关联因种族、民族和性身份而异(例如,学校连通性与异性恋、双性恋、质疑性或其他性身份的青少年的心理健康结果更好有关,但与同性恋或女同性恋的青少年无关)。这些发现可以指导公共卫生干预措施,通过创造所有青年都有归属感并感到他们受到关心和支持的学校环境来促进青年福祉。
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来源期刊
MMWR supplements
MMWR supplements Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
48.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR ) series is prepared by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Often called “the voice of CDC,” the MMWR series is the agency’s primary vehicle for scientific publication of timely, reliable, authoritative, accurate, objective, and useful public health information and recommendations. MMWR readership predominantly consists of physicians, nurses, public health practitioners, epidemiologists and other scientists, researchers, educators, and laboratorians.
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