Health Knowledge among College Freshmen Students in Palestine
Date
2016-03-20
Authors
Farid Ghrayeb
Alwawi, Abdallah
Rasheed, Ossaid
Abu Elhalaweh, Huda
Nimer, Azam
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
IDOSI
Abstract
Inadequate health knowledge is associated with poor health status and increased rates of
morbidity and mortality. College students with limited health knowledge may face many difficulties,
ranging from what major to choose to lifestyle decisions that impact their health status in the present as well
as in the future. The objectives of this descriptive cross sectional study were assessing the health knowledge
among students of five colleges in Al Quds University, Palestine. Students from 5 colleges (580 undergraduate
freshmen students: 307 males and 273 females) participated in this study. The study instrument was a 70-item
inventory used to assess general health knowledge among undergraduate college freshmen students. The
Health Knowledge Inventory (HKI) contains 10 questions from each of 7 health content areas. The results of
this study confirmed that college-aged students are not well-informed about health. Of the 7 health topic
subscales, percentage of correct responses ranged from 37.3% for communicable disease to 47.8%% for
nutrition. Of major concern is the overall lack of health knowledge among these students in a time of growing
health concerns for the 18-24 year-old age group. The results are discussed in light of implications for health
education and health promotion programs at the college level. The findings of this study might facilitate
development of appropriate health education and health promotion interventions for the college population.
The researchers recommend including health courses within the teaching curricula as a compulsory and not
as an elective for all college students regardless of their major.
Description
Keywords
Health knowledge , College students , Freshmen students , Palestine