Clustering of multiple health-risk factors among vocational education students: a latent class analysis

Author:

Atorkey Prince1234ORCID,Paul Christine123,Wiggers John1234,Bonevski Billie13,Nolan Erin13,Oldmeadow Christopher13,Mitchell Aimee12,Byrnes Emma13,Tzelepis Flora1234

Affiliation:

1. School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Newcastle, University Drive, Callaghan, New South Wales, Australia

2. Hunter New England Population Health, Hunter New England Local Health District, New South Wales, Australia

3. Hunter Medical Research Institute, Kookaburra Circuit, New Lambton Heights, New South Wales, Australia

4. Priority Research Centre for Health Behaviour, College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing, University of Newcastle, University Drive, Callaghan, New South Wales, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Physical and mental health risks often commence during young adulthood. Vocational education institutions are an ideal setting for understanding how health-risks cluster together in students to develop holistic multiple health-risk interventions. This is the first study to examine clustering of tobacco smoking, fruit intake, vegetable intake, alcohol consumption, physical inactivity, overweight/obesity, depression, and anxiety in vocational education students and the socio-demographic characteristics associated with cluster membership. A cross-sectional survey with vocational education students (n = 1134, mean age = 24.3 years) in New South Wales, Australia. Latent class analysis identified clusters and latent class regression examined characteristics associated with clusters. Four clusters were identified. All clusters had moderate inadequate fruit intake and moderate overweight/obesity. Cluster 1 (13% of sample) had “high anxiety, high inadequate vegetable intake, low tobacco, and low alcohol use.” Cluster 2 (16% of sample) had “high tobacco smoking, high alcohol use, high anxiety, high depression, and high inadequate vegetable intake.” Cluster 3 (52% of sample) had “high risky alcohol use, high inadequate vegetable intake, low depression, low anxiety, low tobacco smoking, and low physical inactivity.” Cluster 4 (19% of sample) was a “lower risk cluster with high inadequate vegetable intake.” Compared to cluster 4, 16–25-year-olds and those experiencing financial stress were more likely to belong to clusters 1, 2, and 3. Interventions for vocational education students should address fruit and vegetable intake and overweight/obesity and recognize that tobacco use and risky alcohol use sometimes occurs in the context of mental health issues.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

University of Newcastle

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Applied Psychology

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