4.1 Article

Health Risk Behaviors, Experiences, and Conditions Among Students Attending Private and Public High Schools

Journal

JOURNAL OF SCHOOL HEALTH
Volume 91, Issue 9, Pages 683-696

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/josh.13059

Keywords

private schools; public schools; surveys; health risk behaviors

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Private school students exhibit lower prevalence in various health risk behaviors compared to public school students, including sexual risk behaviors, substance use behaviors, behaviors related to mental health and suicide, violence victimization experiences, and behaviors related to unhealthy diet and physical inactivity. Differences by school type were consistent across sex and grade, suggesting the need for tailored prevention activities in each school setting.
BACKGROUND Approximately 8.8% of US high school students attended private schools in 2015. Few studies have characterized health risk behaviors among these students or compared prevalence of behaviors between students in private and public schools using a contemporary, nationally representative sample. METHODS Pooled 2007-2017 national Youth Risk Behavior Survey data were used to estimate the prevalence of 35 health risk behaviors for 89,848 public and private high school students. Unadjusted prevalence ratios were used to compare prevalence by school type. Differences in behaviors by school type were explored by sex and grade. RESULTS Among private school students, the prevalence ranged from 5.0% to 31.9% for sexual risk behaviors; from 0.8% to 30.1% for substance use behaviors; from 0.7% to 21.8% for behaviors related mental health and suicide; from 3.2% to 6.8% for violence victimization experiences; and from 3.1% to 52.9% for behaviors related to unhealthy diet and physical inactivity. Private school students were less likely than public school students to report most behaviors; differences by school type were generally consistent across sex and grade. CONCLUSIONS Students in both public and private schools reported health risk behaviors. Findings might inform prevention activities by identifying behaviors to prioritize in each school setting.

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