Adolescent Competence, Psychological Well-Being, and Self-Assessed Physical Health
- 1 December 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Health and Social Behavior
- Vol. 28 (4) , 364-374
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2136790
Abstract
Longitudinal data from 1,057 adolescents in 19 public schools indicated that self-assessments of physical health were influenced by competence in several important areas of adolescent life and by psychological well-being, but not by physical symptoms. Specifically, adolescents who reported higher levels of school achievement and more participation in sports and other exercise assessed their health to be better over a one-year period when we controlled for initial self-assessment, than those who reported lower achievement and less participation. Physical health status, as measured by common physical symptoms, was associated cross-sectionally with self-assessed health, but its longitudinal effect was mediated by initial levels of self-assessed health. Other longitudinal results showed that adolescents who were initially less depressed assessed their health more positively. The inclination among adolescents to associate competence and psychological well-being with self-assessed physical health may contribute to the expression of distress in somatic terms later in life, and may help explain this commonly observed pattern among adults.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Introspectiveness and adolescent developmentJournal of Youth and Adolescence, 1986
- Student, Parent, and School Effects on the Stress of College ApplicationJournal of Health and Social Behavior, 1982