Finigan-Carr Nadine M, Cheng Tina L, Gielen Andrea, Haynie Denise L, Simons-Morton Bruce
University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD, USA
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Health Educ Behav. 2015 Apr;42(2):220-30. doi: 10.1177/1090198114548479. Epub 2014 Sep 16.
Aggressive and weapons carrying behaviors are indicative of youth violence. The theory of planned behavior is used in the current analysis to improve our understanding of violence-related behaviors. We examine the influence of perceived behavioral control (self-control and decision making) as a part of the overall framework for understanding the risk and protective factors for aggressive behaviors and weapons carrying. As the baseline assessment of an intervention trial, survey data were collected on 452 sixth-grade students (50% girls; 96.6% African American; mean age 12.0 years) from urban middle schools. A total of 18.4% carried a weapon in the prior 12 months, with boys more likely to carry a weapon than girls (22.5% vs. 14.2%, p = .02). Of the youth, 78.4% reported aggressive behaviors with no significant differences found between girls (81.3%) and boys (75.5%). In logistic regression models, having peers who engage in problem behaviors was found to be a significant risk factor. Youth with peers who engaged in numerous problem behaviors were five times more likely to be aggressive than those who reported little or no peer problem behaviors. Teens who reported that their parents opposed aggression (odds ratio [OR] = 0.76; confidence interval [CI] = 0.66, 0.88) and who used self-control strategies (OR = 0.59; CI = 0.39, 0.87) were found to report less aggressive behaviors. For weapons carrying, being a girl (OR = 0.56; CI = 0.32, 0.97) and self-control (OR = 0.52; CI = 0.29, 0.92) were protective factors. This study demonstrated that the theory of planned behavior may provide a useful framework for the development of violence prevention programs. Practitioners should consider integrating strategies for developing healthy relationships and improving self-control.
攻击性行为和携带武器行为是青少年暴力的表现。本分析采用计划行为理论来增进我们对暴力相关行为的理解。我们将感知行为控制(自我控制和决策)的影响作为理解攻击行为和携带武器的风险及保护因素的总体框架的一部分进行考察。作为一项干预试验的基线评估,我们收集了来自城市中学的452名六年级学生(50%为女生;96.6%为非裔美国人;平均年龄12.0岁)的调查数据。在过去12个月中,共有18.4%的学生携带过武器,男生携带武器的可能性高于女生(22.5%对14.2%,p = 0.02)。在这些青少年中,78.4%报告有攻击性行为,女生(81.3%)和男生(75.5%)之间未发现显著差异。在逻辑回归模型中,有参与问题行为的同伴被发现是一个显著的风险因素。有大量问题行为同伴的青少年出现攻击行为的可能性是那些报告很少或没有同伴问题行为的青少年的五倍。报告父母反对攻击行为的青少年(优势比[OR]=0.76;置信区间[CI]=0.66, 0.88)以及使用自我控制策略的青少年(OR = 0.59;CI = 0.39, 0.87)被发现报告的攻击行为较少。对于携带武器而言,身为女生(OR = 0.56;CI = 0.32, 0.97)和自我控制(OR = 0.52;CI = 0.29, 0.92)是保护因素。本研究表明,计划行为理论可能为制定暴力预防计划提供一个有用的框架。从业者应考虑整合发展健康人际关系和提高自我控制的策略。