Which College Students Are at Higher Health Risk?

An electronic health risk appraisal was used to determine which demographic factors were associated with higher health risk among college students at an urban state university. Students’ real age was assessed as the primary indicator of health risk and it was associated to demographic characteristic...

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Main Author: Marcia H. Magnus PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2010-03-01
Series:American Journal of Men's Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1557988308327321
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spelling doaj-67279d845ffd4128b092e8e3a343e4562020-11-25T03:00:04ZengSAGE PublishingAmerican Journal of Men's Health1557-98832010-03-01410.1177/1557988308327321Which College Students Are at Higher Health Risk?Marcia H. Magnus PhDAn electronic health risk appraisal was used to determine which demographic factors were associated with higher health risk among college students at an urban state university. Students’ real age was assessed as the primary indicator of health risk and it was associated to demographic characteristics. Real age represents the physiological age of the body based on lifestyle choices, and this is often different to chronological age. Approximately 26.0% of 576 students were more than 5 years older than their chronological age, 29.8% were 0 to 5 years older, 29.8% were 0 to 5 years younger, and 14.1% were more than 5 years younger than their chronological age. Students who were male, Black, and nonnutrition majors had significantly higher positive real age differentials: their bodies were more likely to be more than 5 years older than their chronological age. Students with significantly lower negative real age differential—those whose real age was lower than their chronological age—were female and nutrition majors. Students were significantly more likely to report that they were “very motivated” if they were female (88.6%), compared with male (66.7%). These data suggest that when health disparities are assessed at the level of real age differential and motivation to make lifestyle changes, male Black college students are at highest health risk and they are less likely to be “very motivated” to make lifestyle changes than their peers.https://doi.org/10.1177/1557988308327321
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marcia H. Magnus PhD
spellingShingle Marcia H. Magnus PhD
Which College Students Are at Higher Health Risk?
American Journal of Men's Health
author_facet Marcia H. Magnus PhD
author_sort Marcia H. Magnus PhD
title Which College Students Are at Higher Health Risk?
title_short Which College Students Are at Higher Health Risk?
title_full Which College Students Are at Higher Health Risk?
title_fullStr Which College Students Are at Higher Health Risk?
title_full_unstemmed Which College Students Are at Higher Health Risk?
title_sort which college students are at higher health risk?
publisher SAGE Publishing
series American Journal of Men's Health
issn 1557-9883
publishDate 2010-03-01
description An electronic health risk appraisal was used to determine which demographic factors were associated with higher health risk among college students at an urban state university. Students’ real age was assessed as the primary indicator of health risk and it was associated to demographic characteristics. Real age represents the physiological age of the body based on lifestyle choices, and this is often different to chronological age. Approximately 26.0% of 576 students were more than 5 years older than their chronological age, 29.8% were 0 to 5 years older, 29.8% were 0 to 5 years younger, and 14.1% were more than 5 years younger than their chronological age. Students who were male, Black, and nonnutrition majors had significantly higher positive real age differentials: their bodies were more likely to be more than 5 years older than their chronological age. Students with significantly lower negative real age differential—those whose real age was lower than their chronological age—were female and nutrition majors. Students were significantly more likely to report that they were “very motivated” if they were female (88.6%), compared with male (66.7%). These data suggest that when health disparities are assessed at the level of real age differential and motivation to make lifestyle changes, male Black college students are at highest health risk and they are less likely to be “very motivated” to make lifestyle changes than their peers.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1557988308327321
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