risk behaviour
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2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Slavka Demuthova ◽  
◽  
Zuzana Rojkova ◽  

Self-harm is a common form of high-risk behaviour in adolescents. It is often linked to depression; however, the correlation between these two variables has scarcely been studied. The presented study on a sample of 1,117 adolescents aged from 11 to 19 (mean age 15.56) compares the occurrence of depressive symptoms (measured by the CDI questionnaire) in individuals who self-harm versus those who do not self-harm, it investigates whether there is a correlation between the intensity of self-harm (measured by a modified SHI questionnaire) and depressive symptoms on a sample of self-harming adolescents, as well as explores the specificities of the correlation in terms of the age and sex of the subjects. The results showed that the occurrence of depressive symptoms: 1/ is statistically significantly higher (p = 0.000) among self-harming individuals compared to non-self-harmers, particularly in female subjects, 2/ significantly correlates with the intensity of self-harming behaviour in the group of self-harmers (p = 0.000), and 3/ it decreases with age among self-harming female subjects. The conclusions point to a need for the clarification of the relationship between depressive symptoms and self-harming behaviour (presence and direction of causality) and to the consequences in clinical practice.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 347-357
Author(s):  
ID Familoni ◽  
OA Moronkola ◽  
OB Familoni

Background: Cardiovascular diseases remain the leading cause of death in developed countries, becoming prevalent in the developing world. Risk behaviour may result in unfavourable outcomes in cardiovascular diseases. Secondary school teachers constitute a large cohort of educated middle-level income earners who can influence young and upcoming individuals due to their profession. Objective: To assess the knowledge, attitude and at-risk behaviour for heart diseases among secondary school teachers in Ibadan Metropolis. Methods: A cross-sectional research design was used. Self- developed, field pre-tested questionnaire was employed to collect the relevant data from 200 randomly teachers. Cronbach alpha method was used to test the internal consistency of the test instruments and a measure of its scale in reliability.   Results: The study population comprised 39.0% males and 61.0% females. Most of the respondents (58.5%) were over 40 years, with an overall mean age of 40.2±3.1 years. The knowledge of secondary school teachers about heart diseases was poor (47.8%), while attitude and at-risk behaviours were unsatisfactory (weighted means 2.34 and 2.23 respectively against a criterion of 2.5). Conclusion: The secondary school teachers in Ibadan Metropolis had poor knowledge of heart diseases and demonstrated poor attitude and unsatisfactory at-risk behaviour about the diseases.


2021 ◽  
pp. 173-203
Author(s):  
Sibnath Deb ◽  
Bishakha Majumdar ◽  
Aleena Maria Sunny
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adelina Artenie ◽  
Shelley N. Facente ◽  
Sheena Patel ◽  
Jack Stone ◽  
Jennifer Hecht ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTBackgroundMen who have sex with men (MSM) and people who inject drugs (PWID) carry a disproportionate burden of HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections. We compared the demographic and risk profiles of MSM who inject drugs (MSM-IDU, i.e., men reached through affiliation with MSM) and PWID who are men and have sex with men (PWID-MSM, i.e., men reached through affiliation with PWID).MethodsWe used data from the most recent waves of the National HIV Behavioural Surveillance among MSM (2017) and PWID (2018) in San Francisco. Participants were recruited through venue-based (MSM) and peer-referral (PWID) sampling and completed standardised questionnaires. We compared the characteristics of MSM-IDU and PWID-MSM using bivariate tests.ResultsOf 504 participants completing the MSM survey, 6.2% reported past-year injection drug use (MSM-IDU). Among 311 male participants completing the PWID survey, 19.0% reported past-year sex with a male (PWID-MSM). Relative to MSM-IDU, more PWID-MSM were older, identified as bisexual, had lower income, a history of incarceration and were homeless. MSM-IDU had more male sexual partners (median: 10 vs 3) and fewer injected daily (29.0% vs 64.4%) than PWID-MSM. While more PWID-MSM sought sterile equipment from a syringe program (86.4% vs 35.5%), fewer reported using PrEP (15.0% vs 42.9%).ConclusionThe sociodemographic, risk behaviour, and prevention access profiles of MSM-IDU and PWID-MSM in San Francisco suggest that they represent distinct populations who may require tailored HIV and HCV prevention strategies. MSM- and PWID-focused prevention programs should provide combined sexual health and harm reduction messages and services.


Author(s):  
Apolinaras Zaborskis ◽  
Aistė Kavaliauskienė ◽  
Charli Eriksson ◽  
Ellen Klemera ◽  
Elitsa Dimitrova ◽  
...  

Family support has a beneficial impact on protecting health-risk behaviour in adolescents. This study aimed to explore whether family support is associated with risk of smoking during transition from early (11 years) to late (15 years) adolescence across 42 countries. The data from the cross-national Health Behaviour in School-aged Children (HBSC) study in 2017/2018 were employed (N = 195,966). Family support was measured using the four-item Family dimension of the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support (sum score 20 or more was categorised as high family support). Smoking was defined as a reported cigarette smoking at least 1–2 days in the last 30 days. The association between smoking and family support was assessed using a prevalence ratio (PR) obtained from the multivariate Poisson regression. Over two thirds of adolescents reported high levels of support from their family. Family support was found to significantly decrease with age in most of the countries, with the boys reported high level of family support more often than girls. The adolescents who reported having low family support also were more likely to smoke compared to their peers who reported having high family support (PR = 1.81; 95% CI: 1.71–1.91 in boys, and PR = 2.19; 95% CI: 2.08–2.31 in girls). The countries with a stronger effect of family support in reducing smoking risk indicated lower rates of adolescent smoking as well as lower increases in the cigarette smoking prevalence during the age period from 11 to 15 years. This study reinforces the need for family support, which is an important asset helping adolescents to overcome the risk of smoking during their transition from early to late adolescence.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Bai James ◽  
Augustus Osborne ◽  
Abdulai Jawo Bah ◽  
Emmanuel Kamanda Margao ◽  
Mohamed Conteh-Barat

Abstract Background: There is very little information on sexual risk behaviour among Sierra Leone and Liberia school-going adolescents. The present study assessed the prevalence and determinants of sexual risk behaviours among school-aged adolescents in Sierra Leone and Liberia. Method: We used publicly available nationally representative cross-sectional datasets of the 2017 Sierra Leone and Liberia Global school health survey. The sample consisted of 2798 and 2744 school-going adolescents from Sierra Leone and Liberia, respectively. Results: The majority of adolescents in the two countries were involved in multiple sexual risk behaviour (80.2%), with higher prevalence observed in Sierra Leone (85.2%) than in Liberia (75.3%), Liberian adolescents showed lesser odds of indulging in multiple sexual risk behaviours than their Sierra Leonean counterparts (AOR=0.572; 95%CI: 0.345-0.946). Male compared to females were more likely to engage in multiple sexual risk behaviour (AOR=2.310;95%CI:1.543-3.458), with a similar pattern observed in both countries. Alcohol use was associated with multiple sexual risk behaviour (AOR=3.064; 95%CI: 2.137-4.392). Also, in Sierra Leone and Liberia, adolescents with one and two or more forms of psychological distress were more likely to have ever had sex than those who do show any form of psychological distress. Missing class/school was associated with multiple sexual risk behaviour (AOR=1.655; 95%CI:1.133-2.418). Peer support was only found to be a protective factor against no condom use among Liberian adolescents (AOR=0.608; 95%CI: 0.435-0.850). Less parental support was only associated with ever had sex more likely to have ever had sex as seen among adolescents in Sierra Leone (AOR=2.027; 95%CI: 1.322-3.107) but not Liberia (1.034(0.650-1.644). Conclusion: Our study found a high sexual risk behaviour among school-going adolescents in Sierra Leone and Liberia. Our finding highlights the need to strengthen sexual and reproductive health education in schools and communities that incorporate mental health promotion activities tailored to this group.


Author(s):  
İbrahim Sönmez ◽  
Cinta Folch ◽  
Nicolas Lorente ◽  
Rigmor C. Berg ◽  
Natalie Thurlby ◽  
...  

AbstractIn a sample of men who have sex with men (MSM) (N = 3436) in Spain who bear intrinsic HIV risk, we investigated how internalised homonegativity (IH) is associated with the number of non-steady male partners with condomless intercourse (as a proxy of sexual risk behaviour). Using structural equation modelling (SEM), we examined the relationship between IH and sexual risk behaviour, and mediating effects of HIV/PrEP knowledge and substance use during sex on this relationship. We found no direct association between IH and sexual risk behaviour, nor did IH influence substance use during sex. In line with our hypothesis, association between IH and sexual risk behaviour was significant when mediated by HIV/PrEP knowledge. We found that as IH increased, sexual risk behaviour decreased, because higher IH was associated with lower HIV/PrEP knowledge while higher HIV/PrEP knowledge was associated with increased non-condom use with non-steady partners. Substance use during sex was significantly associated with sexual risk behaviour. Our results emphasize the continuing importance of prevention strategies focused on behavioural changes and community level interventions, especially targeting substance use.


Psych ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 694-702
Author(s):  
Gabriel Bálint ◽  
Zuzana Slezáková ◽  
Emília Miklovičová

Background: the prevalence of current smokers in patients with coronary syndrome is high. This risk behaviour significantly increases the risk of cardiovascular complications. In the recommendations for the management of cardiovascular diseases, psychosocial and psychological factors are still neglected in practice. The aim of study was to verify the prevalence of tobacco use in hospitalized patients with coronary syndrome, notably to verify the type-D personality and tobacco use in the groups obtained from the evaluation of the DS14 scale. Methods: in this cross-sectional study, we addressed 100 hospitalized patients with coronary syndrome. Results: in the cohort, 48% patient were current smokers, 21% were never smokers, 24% were former smokers, 4% were occasional smokers, and 3% were quitters. Based on the evaluation of DS14, 21% of patients were classified as type-D personality and 38% as non-type-D; we identified two subtypes: the NA group at 23% and the SI group at 18%. In the group of the current smokers, 81% declared that they wanted to quit smoking, 15% of the patients were undecided, and 4% of current smokers did not want to quit. Conclusions: cardiac patients are aware that their disease is related to smoking; despite the severity of their disease, patients’ motivation to change their risky behaviour is low.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Goran Livazović ◽  
◽  
Karlo Bojčić

This report is focused on a theoretical and empirical analysis of an on-line questionnaire implemented with 246 adolescent participants from Croatia in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. The aim of the study was to analyse the relation between the COVID-19 pan­demic related fear and risk behaviour, anxiety and depression in adolescents, including the importance of sociodemographic traits, family/school/peer relationships and media use as risk-protective factors. The research was implemented during the March and April 2020 lockdown in Croatia with participants aged from 18-35 years old. The questionnaire consisted of 5 major parts: socio-demographic measures; media use and interests; Mean world syndrome; risk behaviour; and 2 standardized scales on anxiety and depression with a high validity of the Cronbach’s alpha coefficients ranging from α = .81 to α = .94. Correlation analysis demonstrated significant positive relations between COVID-19 media exposure, risk behaviour and anxiety or depression. Our regression analysis established positive moderate predictive relations between risk behaviour, anxiety and depression (p < .01). No significant effects for risk behaviour in relation to the participants’ sociodemographic traits were found.


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