Korean J Pediatr.  2006 Oct;49(10):1042-1049. 10.3345/kjp.2006.49.10.1042.

Health and risk taking behaviors of freshmen in college

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Pediatrics, Korea University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea. shpark@ns.kumc.or.kr

Abstract

PURPOSE: This study was conducted to survey the preliminary data on risk behaviors and to identify the factors that prevent risk-behaviors in late adolescence.
METHODS
Freshmen(n=1,297) beginning the first semester in Korea University, Seoul, Korea completed self-administered risk behavior questionnaires, comprising 5 domains : demographics, smoking, drinking, drug abuse and sexual behavior.
RESULTS
The rate of smoking experience was higher in people having friends who smoke and the predictors of transition to current smoking were male gender, urban residence, friends' smoking, and nicotine dependence. The rate of high risk drinking was higher among students who are male and who had experience of heavy episodic drinking. The study group showed a low prevalence of narcotic users, but two-thirds of students could get medicine easily without prescriptions. The prevalence of sexual experience was 6.5 percent, and the sexual education was not a predictor of contraceptive behavior. The prevalence of homosexuality was 1.6 percent, and the rate of mostly heterosexuality was higher in female students.
CONCLUSION
The main targets of youth health education should be campaigns aimed at atcessation of reinforcing risk behaviors and the development of a surveillance system for the prevention of chronic disease. These results can be used to find risk factors of health-risk behaviors among late adolescents.

Keyword

Risk taking behaviors; Adolescent; Smoking; Alcohol drinking; Drug abuse; Sexual behavior

MeSH Terms

Adolescent
Alcohol Drinking
Chronic Disease
Contraception Behavior
Demography
Drinking
Education
Female
Friends
Health Education
Heterosexuality
Homosexuality
Humans
Korea
Male
Prescriptions
Prevalence
Surveys and Questionnaires
Risk Factors
Risk-Taking*
Seoul
Sexual Behavior
Smoke
Smoking
Substance-Related Disorders
Tobacco Use Disorder
Smoke
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