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Get Free AccessPurpose: To examine the ways in which perceived risks and benefits relate to health-threatening and health-enhancing behaviors by adolescents. Method: The study used a word association methodology to explore adolescents' thoughts and affective feelings associated with five health-threatening behaviors (e.g., drinking beer, smoking cigarettes) and three health-enhancing behaviors (e.g., exercising, using a seat belt). Results: Each behavior elicited a mix of positive and negative associations. Health-threatening behaviors had many positive associations in common, such as having fun, social facilitation, and physiological arousal. Health-enhancing behaviors had much less commonality in their positive associations. Patterns of negative associations were not highly similar across behaviors. The content and affective tone of the associations were closely linked to participation in health-threatening behaviors and health-enhancing behaviors. Participants in an activity were far more likely than nonparticipants to associate that activity with positive outcomes, concepts, and affect and less likely to produce negative associations. Conclusions: The word association methodology provides a useful technique for exploring adolescents' cognitions and affective reactions with regard to health-related behaviors. The data provided by this method have implications for prevention and intervention programs, as well as for future research.
Alida Benthin, Paul Slovic, Patricia Penas, Herbert H. Severson, C. K. Mertz, Meg Gerrard (1995). Adolescent health-threatening and health-enhancing behaviors: A study of word association and imagery. Journal of Adolescent Health, 17(3), pp. 143-152, DOI: 10.1016/1054-139x(95)00111-5.
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Type
Article
Year
1995
Authors
6
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
Journal of Adolescent Health
DOI
10.1016/1054-139x(95)00111-5
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