J Korean Acad Community Health Nurs.  2016 Dec;27(4):337-345. 10.12799/jkachn.2016.27.4.337.

Factors associated with Unintentional Injuries to Korean Adolescents at School: A Multilevel Study

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Nursing, Dong-A University, Busan, Korea.
  • 2Department of Nursing, Dong-Eui University, Busan, Korea. myosg@deu.ac.kr

Abstract

PURPOSE
This study aims at identifying individual- and school-level factors associated with unintentional injuries to Korean adolescents at school by applying multilevel modeling.
METHODS
From the database of the eleventh Korea Youth Risk Behavior Web-based Survey (KYRBS), the researchers selected 68,043 adolescents from the 7(th) to the 12(th) grades. Data were analyzed using χ² test for prevalence and multilevel modeling for related factors of unintentional injuries at school.
RESULTS
About 22.9 percent of the adolescents had treatment experiences for unintentional injuries at school in the past 12 months. At the individual level, the significant factors associated with unintentional injuries at school included gender, grade, academic achievement, current smoking, alcohol consumption, frequency of high caffeine intake, depression, and relief of fatigue after sleep. At the group level, the significant factors included number of physical education per week and safety education.
CONCLUSION
School based injury prevention programs should be sensitive to both individual- and school-level factors associated with unintentional injury at school among Korean adolescents.

Keyword

Adolescent; Injuries; Schools; Multilevel analysis

MeSH Terms

Adolescent*
Alcohol Drinking
Caffeine
Depression
Education
Fatigue
Humans
Korea
Multilevel Analysis
Physical Education and Training
Prevalence
Risk-Taking
Smoke
Smoking
Caffeine
Smoke

Reference

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