Amy M Kemp, Gabriella Norton, Madison Neese, Yalian Pei, Katy H O'Brien
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: This mixed method study examined how psychosocial factors from the Theory of Planned Behavior and Reasoned Action (TPB/RA) influence health-seeking behaviors after concussion, expanding from student-athlete TPB/RA research to assess the influence of psychosocial factors within a general college population. Participants: Two hundred and forty-four students participated from a large Southeastern public university. Methods: A concurrent nested mixed-methods approach involving closed- and constructed- response survey questions. Results: Subjective norms (direct: B = .499, p = .002; indirect: B = .023, p = .046) and attitude (indirect: B = .034, p = .041) were significant predictors of intention to seek medical care after a hypothetical concussion. Open-ended responses were coded by anticipated post-injury behaviors. Only 36.2% of the sample indicated intention to seek medical care. The most common response (38.3%) was students would self-treat a suspected concussion. Conclusions: Subjective norms and indirect attitudes are important to understanding how general college students seek care after a concussion, particularly how the influence of others are important in the decision to seek healthcare.
目的:采用混合方法研究计划行为与理性行为理论(TPB/RA)的心理社会因素对脑震荡后寻求健康行为的影响,将学生运动员TPB/RA研究扩展到普通大学生人群中心理社会因素的影响。参与者:244名来自东南部一所大型公立大学的学生参与了研究。方法:一种并发嵌套混合方法方法,涉及封闭式和构造性回答调查问题。结果:主观规范(直接:B =。499, p = .002;间接的;023, p = .046)和态度(间接:B =。034, p = .041)是假设脑震荡后寻求医疗护理意向的显著预测因子。开放式回答以预期的损伤后行为编码。只有36.2%的样本表示有意寻求医疗护理。最常见的反应(38.3%)是学生会自我治疗疑似脑震荡。结论:主观规范和间接态度对理解普通大学生在脑震荡后如何寻求医疗保健很重要,特别是他人的影响在寻求医疗保健的决定中有多么重要。
期刊介绍:
Binge drinking, campus violence, eating disorders, sexual harassment: Today"s college students face challenges their parents never imagined. The Journal of American College Health, the only scholarly publication devoted entirely to college students" health, focuses on these issues, as well as use of tobacco and other drugs, sexual habits, psychological problems, and guns on campus, as well as the students... Published in cooperation with the American College Health Association, the Journal of American College Health is a must read for physicians, nurses, health educators, and administrators who are involved with students every day.