Adolescent perception of premature risk for death: Contributions from individual and environmental contextual factors

Citation

Duke, Naomi N.; Skay, Carol L.; Pettingell, Sandra L.; & Borowsky, Iris W. (2009). Adolescent perception of premature risk for death: Contributions from individual and environmental contextual factors. Academic Pediatrics. vol. 9 (4) pp. 256-262

Abstract

Objective
Adolescent perception of premature risk for death is a cause of great concern. This study identified individual and environmental characteristics of youth expressing perception of premature risk for death.

Methods
Data are from Waves 1 (1995) and 3 (2001–2002) of the in-home interviews from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. The study sample included 12,103 adolescents and 10,519 parents (Wave 1) and 9130 young adults (Wave 3). Logistic regression models were used to determine contexts for health risk, connection, safety and monitoring, individual/developmental, and caregiver/family characteristics associated with adolescent early death perception.

Results
One in 7 youth endorsed perceived risk for early demise. After controlling for demographic factors, adolescent early death perception is a powerful marker for high-risk status, including involvement in self-destructive behaviors (odds ratio [OR] 1.32–13.97, P = .01–P <.001) and physical and psychological distress (OR 8.33–39.37, P < .001). Alternately, models for stronger connection in the primary socializing domains, perceptions of safety, academic achievement, outlets for participation, and better caregiver capacity offered significant protective effect (OR 0.10–0.91, P < .001). In a final multivariate model, unique relationships between adolescent early death perception and health risk behavior and exposure, adult and peer connection, mental health, and parent/family economic security emerged.

Conclusions
Study findings support further research into constructs for premature death perception as a potential mechanism to facilitate intervention with youth who may be at risk for further negative life trajectories, including depressive reactions and extreme reactions to future adverse life events.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016%2Fj.acap.2009.02.004

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Academic Pediatrics

Author(s)

Duke, Naomi N.
Skay, Carol L.
Pettingell, Sandra L.
Borowsky, Iris W.

Year Published

2009

Volume Number

9

Issue Number

4

Pages

256-262

ISSN/ISBN

1876-2859

DOI

10.1016/j.acap.2009.02.004

Reference ID

1027