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Volume 35, Issue 6, Pages 493-500 (December 2004)


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Reducing risk, increasing protective factors: Findings from the Caribbean Youth Health Survey

Robert W. Blum, M.D., Ph.D.aCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Marjorie Ireland, Ph.D.b

Accepted 31 January 2004.

Abstract 

Purpose

To identify the prevalence of health-compromising behaviors, and the risk and protective factors associated with them among youth in the Caribbean, and to predict the likelihood of these outcomes given the presence or absence of the risk and protective factors.

Methods

Analyses were done on the results of a 1997–98 survey of over 15,500 young people in nine countries of the Caribbean Community. The four health-compromising behaviors studied included violence involvement, sexual intercourse, tobacco use, and alcohol use. Logistic regression was used to identify the strongest risk and protective factors, and also to create models for predicting the outcomes given combinations of the risk and protective factors.

Results

Rage was the strongest risk factor for every health-compromising behavior for both genders, and across all age groups, and school connectedness was the strongest protective factor. For many of the outcomes studied, increased protective factors were associated with as much or more reduction of involvement in health-compromising behaviors than a decrease in risk factors.

Conclusion

This research suggests the importance of strengthening the protective factors in the lives of vulnerable youth not just reducing risk.

a Department of Population and Family Health Sciences, The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA

b Division of General Pediatrics and Adolescent Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA

Corresponding Author InformationAddress correspondence to: Robert W. Blum, Department of Population and Family Health Sciences, The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA

PII: S1054-139X(04)00097-7

doi:10.1016/j.jadohealth.2004.01.009


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