Age- and gender-specific variations of attitudes to health and healthy lifestyle in academic youth

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Dr.Hab. A.A. Pashin1
PhD A.N. Khmelkov1
Postgraduate A.M. Vasilyeva1
1
Penza State University, Penza

Keywords: health, health values, gender-specific health attitudes, health attitude parameters and components.

Background. National health situation is commonly ranked among the key life quality indicators and objective measures of the social and national development; and in this context the current national health situation in Russia raises very serious concerns. Multiple studies for the last few decades have been indicative of the negative health trends particularly expressed in the young population.

As reported by the Ministry of Health of Russia, 94.5% of the university entrants are diagnosed with different health disorders; and at least 50% of the school graduates have 2-3 chronic diseases [7].

As found by the joint studies of the Psychological and Educational Problems of Physical Culture Division of the Federal Research Centre of Russian Physical Culture Research Institute (FRC RPCRI) and Russian State Oil and Gas University named after I.M. Gubkin, 7%, 30%, 27% and 36% of the students are classified with the safe, average, below average and low health categories, respectively [3].

Poor health makes it impossible for the students to succeed in the academic education process and professional careers. This is the prime reason why urgent actions need to be taken to improve the health standards, promote healthy lifestyle and encourage conscientious demand for physical culture and sports.

Since a success of any activity largely depends on the attitude to it, a high priority must be given to the health values and their building and promotion initiatives. These initiatives cannot be effective unless the students’ values-driven attitudes to health and healthy lifestyle in every aspect and the relevant motivations and needs are duly studied [4, 8].

Methods and structure of the study. It is the individual relationship concept that implies success of every activity being determined by the attitude to the mission, goals and content of the activity that was applied as a methodological basis for the study [1, 5]. For the test purposes, we applied the Health Attitudes Index Test to rank the health value in the hierarchy of the subjects’ life values and the value intensity classified by the following components: perceptive-affective; cognitive; practical and behavioural ones – that refer to the values manifestations in the emotional, cognitive, and behavioural domains [2]. The intensity rate was estimated by the points for the above components being summated. It shows how well developed the attitude to health and healthy lifestyle is and how expressed its manifestations are.

Subject to our studies in the periods of 2007-2009 and 2013-2014 were 1500 first-to-fourth-year students of the humanities and technical departments of Penza State University attributed to the basic health group [6].

Study results and discussion. Average componential rates of the attitudes to the health values and healthy lifestyles tested in the first-to-fourth-year subjects are given in Table 1 hereunder. As demonstrated in Table 1, variations of the subjects’ attitudes throughout the academic study period (as of 2007-2009 and 2013-2014) are similar. The first-year subjects are tested with the lowest rates; in the second academic year, the value of health tends to grow; followed by a sag and return to the initial level in the third and fourth year. These variations, however, are more often than not statistically insignificant (P>0.05 by Student t-criterion). It should be noted that the health category is ranked number 4 in the hierarchy of eight life values (good things and assets; communion with nature; love and family; health; healthy lifestyle; work/ career/ education; spirituality/ ethical values; self-development) after love, communication and professional progress.

The same trend albeit more expressed was found for the variation of health value (or attitude to health). The rate was found to significantly grow in the second year versus the first one; followed by a significant fall in the third year and a new rise in the fourth year.

It should be noted that the intensity structure every year is dominated by the perceptive-affective component i.e. the emotional component of the index albeit both the positive and negative variations (in the second through third year) are mostly due (in the percentage terms) to the variations of the cognitive and practical components – that may be interpreted as an emphasis on the cognitive and practical aspect of the health value in the second-year students.

These variations appear to correlate with the yearly variations in the practical academic physical education sessions and contributions of a variety of the relevant academic disciplines including the Health Knowledge Basics and Concepts of Modern Natural Sciences plus some other disciplines of high effect on the students’ values.

Upon completion of the above curricula in the third academic year, the health value intensity was tested to fall abruptly to the minimal rates. The cognitive and practical attitudes are replaced by the emotional ones again that are still dominant in the fourth year. It may be mentioned in this context that the variations of attitudes to health and healthy lifestyles generally coincide with the students’ physical fitness variations; e.g. the second-year students are tested both with the highest health values and physical fitness rates in the whole university period.

Gender profiles of the health values are however indicative of the above variations being largely determined by the female students’ attitudes as they outbalance their male peers in most rates and components of the health value. This dominance is statistically significant in the first year; by intensity on the whole in the first-through-third year; by the perceptive-affective and cognitive components in all the four years; and by the behavioural component in the third year (P<0.05).

The intensity variations in the male group were found statistically insignificant (P>0.05); albeit in the first and second year the intensity structure is dominated by the practical component i.e. shows prevalence of the practical aspect in the attitude to health with the relevant higher motivation for activity. Female students of all ages were tested with prevalence of the perceptive-affective component that means the domination of emotional aspects in the attitude to health with the relatively low motivations for activity.

Table 1. Average rates and components of the attitudes to health in the basic health group as of 2007-2009 and 2013-2014

Subject group

Dominance,

М ± m

Intensity,

М ± m

Intensity components, М ± m

Perceptive-affective

Cognitive

Practical

Behavioural

Coherence

First year

2007-2009

n=256

5,17±0,066

33,98±0,597

10,84±0,199

6,66±0,188

10,03±0,166

6,49±0,177

4,35

2013-2014

n=100

5,30±0,119

31,12±0,650

10,80±0,282

5,87±0,247

8,85±0,282

6,23±0,282

4,93

Second year

2007-2009

n=178

5,41±0,084

35,88±0,671

11,55±0,251

7,12±0,224

10,89±0,238

6,42±0,251

5,55

2013-2014

n=100

5,51±0,100

35,10±0,998

11,69±0,282

6,45±0,282

10,01±0,320

7,05±0,339

5,24

Third year

2007-2009

n=210

5,38±0,075

32,09±0,562

10,66±0,225

6,09±0,187

9,49±0,199

6,05±0,187

4,61

2013-2014

n=100

5,33±0,119

30,95±0,821

10,36±0,247

5,82±0,339

9,00±0,263

5,77±0,282

4,59

Fourth year

2007-2009

n=140

5,31±0,097

33,91±0,726

11,67±0,242

6,89±0,290

9,89±0,258

5,35±0,290

6,32

2013-2014

n=100

5,32±0,119

33,15±0,904

11,38±0,301

5,93±0,271

9,61±0,282

6,12±0,339

5,45

 

Table 2. Gender-specific variations of the average rated attitudes to health and healthy lifestyle in the basic health group, in points

Year

Gender

Dominance,

М ± m

Intensity,

М ± m

Intensity components, М ± m

Perceptive-affective

Cognitive

Practical

Behavioural

Coherence

1

Male

n=85

5,05±0,132

32,16±0,966

9,91±0,398

6,04±0,377

10,07±0,332

6,14±0,398

4,03

Female

n=84

5,66±0,134

35,77±0,960

12,05±0,268

7,16±0,345

9,98±0,290

6,57±0,402

5,38

2

Male

n=40

5,43±0,220

32,51±1,538

10,40±0,659

6,23±0,586

10,67±0,549

5,21±0,659

5,46

Female

n=57

5,58±0,172

39,02±1,209

12,66±0,432

7,69±0,518

11,21±0,489

7,46±0,461

5,20

3

Male

n=40

5,41±0,220

30,4±1,502

9,91±0,622

5,88±0,513

8,87±0,439

5,75±0,586

4,16

Female

n=39

5,5±0,223

36,71±1,340

12,38±0,447

7,19±0,670

9,69±0,558

7,45±0,633

5,19

4

Male

n=59

5,45±0,169

32,99±0,984

10,48±0,506

7,35±0,478

9,53±0,422

5,63±0,506

4,85

Female

n=80

5,48±0,138

34,49±1,015

12,50±0,577

6,63±0,346

10,17±0,577

5,19±0,369

7,31

Conclusion. The study data and analysis explain the following paradox: despite the fact that the female students tend to rate the health values higher, intensities of the health value rates are higher as well and the componential structure is more balanced, they are normally outperformed by their male peers in the practical physical culture and health improvement activity with the female group showing preference to the hygienic and cosmetic health aspects and services and hedonic lifestyles.

Study and test data on the age- and gender-specific variations of the attitudes to health makes it possible to rate the age-specific progress and regress and rank health in the life values; and, hence, optimise correspondingly the academic physical education processes by making a special emphasis on the key gender-specific motivators including those crucial for the GTO Complex tests.

References

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  7. Smirnov N.K. Zdorovyesberegayuschie obrazovatelnye tekhnologii i psikhologiya zdorovya v shkole [Health-promoting educational technologies and health psychology of in school]. 2nd., rev. and sup. Moscow: ARKTI publ., 2006, 320 p.
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Corresponding author: fizkult@teoriya.ru

Abstract

The study considers the age- and gender-specific variations of health and healthy-lifestyle related values in the academic youth. Objective of the study was to rate some aspects of the relevant attitudes including dominance, intensity, coherence of intensity and variations of these rates and intensities in the academic study period; and to find the gender-specific differences in the attitudes to health and healthy lifestyles.

The authors applied a concept of subjective personal attitudes as a practical basis for the study, with the concept assuming individual actions being largely dictated by the habitual subjective attitudes to the surrounding world pivotal for success in every activity. The empirical data generated by the study made it possible to profile age- and social-status-specific variations of the study parameters and components in the 1-4-year students; identify the dominant components in the health attitudes; find gender differences in the data pointing to certain regularities in the academic education period; and outline the ways to optimize the educational process.