Journal of Adolescent Health
Volume 41, Issue 3 , Pages 294-301, September 2007

Alcohol Use, Sexual Activity, and Perceived Risk in High School Athletes and Non-Athletes

  • Reagan R. Wetherill, M.A.
  • ,
  • Kim Fromme, Ph.D.

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress correspondence to: Kim Fromme, Ph.D., Department of Psychology, The University of Texas at Austin, 1 University Station, A8000, Austin, TX 78712.

Department of Psychology, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas

Received 15 November 2006; accepted 24 April 2007.

Abstract 

Purpose

The current study examined one’s sense of personal invincibility as a contributing factor to high school athletes’ more frequent behavioral risks compared to those of non-athletes. Perceived risk was assessed as a mediator of sports participation and alcohol use, and sports participation and sexual activity among high school athletes.

Methods

Prior to leaving home, college-bound high school graduates (n = 2,247) completed web-based surveys assessing alcohol use, sexual activity, sports participation, and perceived risk. The mediational models were analyzed using generalized linear modeling and the procedures of Baron and Kenny (1986).

Results

Relative to non-athletes, athletes reported greater alcohol use, more sexual partners, and lower perceived risk. Perceived risk mediated the association between sports participation and alcohol use for both young men and women. Perceived risk also mediated the association between sports participation and number of sexual partners for women and partially mediated this association for men. Perceived risk partially mediated the association between sports participation and episodes of unsafe sexual activity in both men and women.

Conclusions

These findings suggest a potential cognitive mechanism which may account for differences in alcohol use and sexual activity between athletes and non-athletes during late adolescence.

Keywords: Athletics, Perceived risk, Alcohol drinking, Sexual activity

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PII: S1054-139X(07)00195-4

doi:10.1016/j.jadohealth.2007.04.019

Journal of Adolescent Health
Volume 41, Issue 3 , Pages 294-301, September 2007