HOME > HBNS > CHILDREN AND YOUNG PEOPLE'S HEALTH
Teen Well-Being Spills Over Into Young Adult Health
Release Date: July 19, 2011 |
KEY POINTS
- A teen who reports positive well-being is more likely to be healthy as a young adult, an influence that extends beyond how adolescent health predicts adult health.
- Teens who report positive well-being are likelier than others to avoid risky behaviors as young adults.
- Research into teenage health is expanding from a focus on avoiding negative outcomes to include positive youth development, resilience and empowerment.
A new study finds that teens with a positive sense of well-being are more likely to report being healthy in young adulthood. The research suggests this is not just because teenagers who feel good about themselves are healthy in the first place.
A sense of well-being in teens appears to have an affect “above and beyond how adolescent health predicts adult health,” said study co-author Emma Adam, an associate professor of education and social policy at Northwestern University.
The study appears online in the Journal of Adolescent Health.
In recent years, researchers have tried to understand the value of well-being, which Adam said is related to happiness, but also encompasses things like positive self-esteem, optimism about the future and “feeling good about your level of involvement and acceptance” in society.
These factors all work together, she said. “If you have a high positive mood and feel happy, you’re going to be easier and more fun to be around, which will increase your social acceptance and your self-esteem.”
In the new study, the researchers analyzed the results of surveys of tens of thousands of teens and parents from grades 7-12 in the United States. The participants, who first completed surveys from 1994-1995, took surveys again in 2000 and 2001, when the teens had become young adults.
Compared to those who did not report positive well-being, the odds were higher that those who did report positive well-being as teens would also say they were in good health as adults.
After adjusting their figures so they would not be thrown off by factors like the number of kids who were depressed, the researchers found that teens with positive well-being were more likely to avoid engaging in risky behaviors once they grew up.
The study does not prove that well-being directly causes better health. However, well-being could boost health in a variety of ways, Adam said. People with positive self-esteem, for instance, might be more likely to exercise and protect their health, while positive feelings might boost the immune system, she said.
Research like this matters because it helps pinpoint the positive aspects of adolescent life that affect long-term health, said Sarah Stoddard, a research assistant professor at the University of Michigan School of Public Health.
“For a long time, we were very focused on risk and how would we fix the bad things that go on for kids,” Stoddard said. “With some of the more recent research in and around positive youth development, resilience and empowerment, we’ve flipped that a little bit. We also need to know what aspects of themselves or their lives are positive and how we can promote those positive things.”
TERMS OF USE: This story is protected by copyright. When reproducing any material, including interview excerpts, attribution to the Health Behavior News Service, part of the Center for Advancing Health, is required.
# # #
For More Information:
Reach the Health Behavior News Service, part of the Center for Advancing Health, at hbns-editor@cfah.org or (202) 387-2829.
Journal of Adolescent Health: Contact Tor Berg at (415) 502-1373 or tor.berg@ucsf.edu or visit www.jahonline.org. Hoyt LT, et al. Positive youth, healthy adults: does positive well-being in adolescence predict better perceived health and fewer risky health behaviors in young adulthood? J Adolesc Health online, 2011.
Tags for this article:
Children and Young People's Health
Lifestyle and Prevention Mental Health
Comments on this article
Please note: CFAH reserves the right to moderate all comments posted to the Health Behavior News Service. Any inappropriate postings will be removed.
No comments have been entered yet.
Add Your Comment
HEALTH BEHAVIOR NEWS
![]() |
Marijuana & Alcohol Use Common among 10th Grade Students |
![]() |
Obesity Lowers Quality of Life in Boys |
![]() |
Children and Siblings of Deployed Military More Likely to Use Drugs |
![]() |
Teens Increasingly Abuse Prescription Painkillers |
![]() |
Sweetener Found In Gum May Prevent Ear Infections In Children |
| Getting Kids to Be Active Conversation Continues | March 26, 2012 |
|
| Prepared Patient: Young Adults Taking the Health Care Reins (Updated Version) Health Behavior News Service | February 9, 2012 |
|
| Conversation Continues: Young Adults and The Affordable Care Act CFAH Staff | June 17, 2011 |
|
| Conversation Continues: Kangaroo Care & 'Less' is 'More' CFAH Staff | December 15, 2010 |
|
| Good Idea, Bad Execution: Dosing Errors, A Preventable Harm Scott Gavura | December 15, 2010 |





