Primary and secondary control in academic development: gender-specific implications for stress and health in college students
Authors:
Nathan C. Hall a;
Judith G. Chipperfield b;
Raymond P. Perry b;
Joelle C. Ruthig b;
Thomas Goetz c
| Affiliations: | a University of California, Irvine, California, USA |
| b University of Manitoba, Canada | |
| c University of Munich, Germany |
DOI:
10.1080/10615800600581168
Publication Frequency:
5 issues per year
Subjects:
Anxiety in Children & Adolescents;
Psychiatry & Clinical Psychology - Adult;
Psychological Science;
Stress and Emotion in the Workplace;
Stress in Adults;
Stress in Children & Adolescents;
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Abstract
During the first year of college, students are faced with numerous educational and personal stressors which can negatively impact their psychological and physical health. The present study examined the benefits of primary and secondary control for self-rated health in students based on Rothbaum, Weisz, and Synder's (1982) dual-process model of control, and examined stress and gender as potential mediating variables. College students' (n=888) primary and secondary academic control and perceived stress were assessed in the first semester, and self-rated global health, illness symptoms, and illness-related behaviors were assessed at the end of the academic year. For males, primary control was indirectly related to better overall health and fewer symptoms through lower stress levels, and both primary and secondary control directly corresponded to lower illness behaviors. For females, only secondary control was related to better overall health and illness symptoms, albeit indirectly through reduced stress. The mediational roles of stress and gender in health research on primary/secondary control and potential control-enhancing interventions are discussed.
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| Keywords: Primary and secondary control; college student health; stress; gender |
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