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Journal Article

Citation

Siziya S, Mazaba ML. Front. Public Health 2015; 3: 180.

Affiliation

Immune and Vaccine Preventable Diseases, World Health Organization , Lusaka , Zambia ; Virology Unit, University Teaching Hospital, Ministry of Health , Lusaka , Zambia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Frontiers Editorial Office)

DOI

10.3389/fpubh.2015.00180

PMID

26236704

PMCID

PMC4503886

Abstract

There is scanty information on correlates for psychosocial distress in Zambia. Secondary analysis was conducted using the data collected in 2004 in Zambia during the global school-based health survey to determine the prevalence and correlates for psychosocial distress. Logistic regression analyses were used to estimate magnitudes of associations between exposure factors and the outcome, while the Yates' corrected Chi-squared test was used to compare proportions at the 5% significance level. A total of 2257 students participated in the survey of which 54.2% were males. Males were generally older than females (p < 0.001). Significantly, more females than males were bullied (p = 0.036), involved in a fight (p = 0.019), and consumed alcohol (p = 0.012). Psychosocial distress was detected in 15.7% of the participants (14.4% of males and 16.8% of females). Age <14 years, male gender, parental support for males, and having close friends were protective factors against psychosocial distress. Risk factors for psychosocial distress were being bullied, involvement in a fight, alcohol consumption, being physically active, and parental support. The prevalence of psychosocial distress among adolescents in Zambia appears to be common. There is a need to validate the psychosocial distress indicators that were used in the current study.


Language: en

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