College men's health: an overview and a call to action

scientific article published on May 1998

College men's health: an overview and a call to action is …
instance of (P31):
review articleQ7318358
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1080/07448489809596004
P698PubMed publication ID9609975

P2093author name stringCourtenay WH
P2860cites workAre adolescents receptive to current sales promotion practices of the tobacco industry?Q45945917
Testicular self-examination by young men: an analysis of characteristics associated with practiceQ46125072
Health trends among college freshmenQ46142621
Seat belt use on a university campusQ46396831
Health risk behaviors among California college studentsQ46398044
Visits to the college health service for alcohol-related injuriesQ46549066
Sex, alcohol and sexually transmitted diseases: a national surveyQ46585091
Oral mucosal smokeless tobacco lesions among adolescents in the United States.Q46983772
Gender differences in perception of risk associated with alcohol and drug use among college studentsQ47271398
Gender, race, and perception of environmental health risksQ47649724
Demographic influences on risk perceptionsQ47928646
Gender, race, class and self-reported sexually transmitted disease incidenceQ50110919
Cardiovascular health knowledge in the United States: findings from the National Health Interview Survey, 1985.Q50133860
Knowledge of colorectal cancer and use of screening tests in persons 40-74 years of age.Q50554470
Mechanisms in multiple risk factor interventions: smoking, physical activity, and dietary fat intake among manufacturing workers. Working Well Research Group.Q50771207
Weapon carrying and substance abuse among college students.Q50942793
An examination of gender differences in traffic accident risk perceptionQ51150711
Sex differences in depressed university students.Q52090188
DSM-III: psychiatric diagnosis in a university population.Q52103990
Snuffing tobacco out of sport.Q52265230
Unrealistic optimism about susceptibility to health problems: conclusions from a community-wide sampleQ28298244
Physical activity and public health. A recommendation from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American College of Sports MedicineQ29614199
Sex differences in unipolar depression: evidence and theoryQ34183892
Alcohol and masculinityQ34514022
Adolescent and elderly white male suicide trends: evidence of changing well-being?Q37622222
Why patients delay seeking care for cancer symptoms. What you can do about it.Q37651401
Factors associated with use of safer sex practices among college freshmenQ39402622
Knowledge, attitudes, and personal practices regarding prevention and early detection of cancer.Q39413916
Mortality and Morbidity From Injuries in Sports and RecreationQ40177143
Substance use and abuse among college students: a review of recent literatureQ40565136
Characteristics of African-Americans with multiple risk factors associated with HIV/AIDS.Q40950332
Sexually transmitted diseases in college men: a preliminary clinical investigationQ41062524
College students' perception of vulnerability/susceptibility and desire for health informationQ41078116
Gender differences in health related behaviour: some unanswered questionsQ41182496
AIDS and college health: knowledge, threat, and prevention at a northeastern universityQ41203189
Risk reduction for nonmelanoma skin cancer with childhood sunscreen use.Q42524762
Knowledge about AIDS and reported risk behaviors among black college studentsQ43314467
Cancer awareness and self-examination practices in young men and womenQ43429181
The increasing disparity in mortality between socioeconomic groups in the United States, 1960 and 1986.Q43485976
Binge drinking, tobacco, and illicit drug use and involvement in college athletics. A survey of students at 140 American collegesQ43490521
Smokeless tobacco use among American college studentsQ44343781
Patterns of smokeless tobacco use among university athletesQ44452024
Risk factors for injury during adolescenceQ44525397
Cardiovascular reactivity to stress in men. Effects of masculine gender role stress appraisal and masculine performance challengeQ44978484
Masculine Gender-Role Stress: Predictor of Anger, Anxiety, and Health-Risk BehaviorsQ45078340
Beyond performance enhancement: polypharmacy among collegiate users of steroidsQ45095303
P433issue6
P304page(s)279-290
P577publication date1998-05-01
P1433published inJournal of American College HealthQ15746397
P1476titleCollege men's health: an overview and a call to action
P478volume46

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q50671305"It used to be that if it weren't broken and bleeding profusely, I would never go to the doctor": men, masculinity, and health.
Q36763438A Comparison of Dietary Habits between Recreational Runners and a Randomly Selected Adult Population in Slovenia
Q28649377A population-based study of premature mortality in relation to neighbourhood density of alcohol sales and cheque cashing outlets in Toronto, Canada
Q37030736A study of the perception of health risks among college students in China
Q38111193Beyond workers' compensation: men's mental health in and out of work.
Q45907303Changes in healthcare use across the transition from civilian to military life.
Q48303694College men's depression-related help-seeking: a gender analysis.
Q33948492College men's health in practice: a multidisciplinary approach
Q51775911Connecting masculinity and depression among international male university students.
Q33878028Constructions of masculinity and their influence on men's well-being: a theory of gender and health
Q35107787Couplelinks - an online intervention for young women with breast cancer and their male partners: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
Q46481177Developing a college men's growth group
Q47188217Dispositional optimism and physical wellbeing: the relevance of culture, gender, and socioeconomic status
Q33751800Doing masculinity, not doing health? a qualitative study among dutch male employees about health beliefs and workplace physical activity
Q50799140Examining gender differences in the health behaviors of Canadian university students.
Q45905056Faux masculinities among college men who experience depression.
Q28253868Gender and ethnic differences in health beliefs and behaviors
Q80377143Gender specific activation patterns of trunk muscles during whole body tilt
Q47390297Health risk behaviors among college youths: a cross-cultural comparison
Q51221485Health risk behaviors and physical symptom reporting among Jordanian youths: personality and sociodemographic correlates.
Q58608220Masculinities, cultural worldviews and risk perceptions among South African adolescent learners
Q34286773Masculinity and men's mental health.
Q45949555Masculinity in young men's health: exploring health, help-seeking and health service use in an online environment.
Q34286762Men's reproductive and sexual health
Q33786672Men, HIV/AIDS, and human rights
Q33916174Men, masculinity, and cancer: risk-factor behaviors, early detection, and psychosocial adaptation
Q37465561Mental health status and gender as risk factors for onset of physical illness over 10 years
Q44042437Moving beyond the prostate: benefits in broadening the scope of research on men and cancer.
Q51045686Negative social perception of hypothetical workers with rheumatoid arthritis.
Q36448884Nurses' tending instinct as a conduit for men's access to mental health counseling
Q46520587Patients' waiting time at an outpatient clinic in Nigeria--can it be put to better use?
Q46413697Primary care for young African American men.
Q34572714Promoting screening and early detection of cancer in men.
Q31041347Providing medical information to college health center personnel: a circuit Librarian Service at the University of Illinois
Q34020898Psychosocial correlates of medical mistrust among African American men.
Q34782947Re: silent epidemic of depression in women in the middle East and north Africa region
Q58197561Spectators’ Negotiations of Risk, Masculinity and Performative Mobilities at the TT Races
Q50174537Testicular cancer among African American college men: knowledge, perceived risk, and perceptions of cancer fatalism.
Q51350207The impact of gender roles on health.
Q36634327The potential influence of masculine identity on health-improving behavior in midlife and older African American men
Q33948485Toward a transformed approach to prevention: breaking the link between masculinity and violence
Q33595249Urban-rural disparity in utilization of preventive care services in China
Q50480281Using the PRECEDE model to plan men's health programs in a managed care setting.
Q35727864Utilization of preventive care services and their effect on cardiovascular outcomes in the United States
Q34781720Web-based nutrition education for college students: Is it feasible?
Q41528162Working "upstream": why we shouldn't use heterosexual women as health promotion change agents in HIV-prevention interventions aimed at heterosexual men.

Search more.