Title: Update on the ACHA National College Health Assessment
1Update on the ACHA National College Health
Assessment
- Using the ACHA-NCHA to Examine the Health Status
and Health Needs of Your Students - An ACHA Professional Development Workshop
- November 30 December 2, 2006
- Las Vegas
- Pat Ketcham, PhD, CHES, Oregon State University
- Mary Hoban, PhD, CHES, American College Health
Association
2Objectives
- Describe the development of the ACHA-NCHA
- Identify trends in alcohol and other drug use,
sexual behaviors, and depression from the Spring
2005 Reference Group. - List three ways campuses are using ACHA-NCHA data.
3What is the ACHA-NCHA?
- A national, non-profit, research effort that
- Assesses college health factors that impact
academic performance, retention, and campus life - Assists campus professionals in collecting data
about the health of their students - Health service providers
- Health Educators
- Counselors
- Administrators
4What is the ACHA-NCHA?
- The ACHA-NCHA is a comprehensive college health
questionnaire that provides important data about
a wide variety of college health topics - These data can be used to
- Plan programs
- Prioritize campus needs
- Allocate resources
- Design strategies for intervention
- Identify protective and risk factors associated
with academic performance - Measure progress on National Health Objectives
5What is the ACHA-NCHA?
- 13 waves of the survey successfully conducted
since Spring 2000 - More than 355,000 students from 546 campuses have
participated - An ever growing and increasingly rich picture of
college student health!
6Historical Outline
- May 1997- ACHA Annual Meeting in New Orleans
- January 1998 First Work Group Meeting 25
volunteers meet in Chicago - Spring 1998 Pilot 10 IHEs n2,007
7- December 1998 Third Work Group Meeting in
Chicago - Spring 1999 Pilot 11 IHEs n3,649
- Relationship with the Core Institute Began with
Spring 2000 survey
8- January 2000 NCHA Advisory Committee appointed
by ACHA - Haines and Haubenriser are co-chairs!
- November 2000 NCHA Advisory Meets in Baltimore
- Spring 2003 All NCHA operations move from the
Core Institute to ACHA - ACHA-NCHA web-assessment introduced
9- June 2003 Ketcham and Orr co-chairs of
ACHA-NCHA Advisory Committee - May 2005 Spring 2003 Reference Group results
published in JACH - June 2005 Ketcham and Mallinson co-chairs of
ACHA-NCHA Advisory Committee
10- December 2005 ACHA-NCHA Professional
Development Workshop and Subcommittee Meeting on
Survey Revisions - January 2006 Spring 2004 Reference Group
results published in JACH - July 2006 Spring 2005 Reference Group results
published in JACH
11- Nov/Dec 2006 ACHA-NCHA Professional Development
Workshop in Las Vegas - January 2007 Spring 2006 Reference Group
results to be published in JACH, and annually
thereafter - Spring 2007 Pilot testing of revised ACHA-NCHA
- Fall 2007 Revised ACHA-NCHA ready for
implementation
12ACHA-NCHA Participation to Date
Schools Sample (n)
Spring 2000 28 16,024
Fall 2000 20 10,413
Spring 2001 31 16,813
Fall 2001 8 4,717
Spring 2002 44 28,258
Fall 2002 20 10,374
Spring 2003 33 19,497
Fall 2003 21 11,990
Spring 2004 74 47,202
Fall 2004 50 24,804
Spring 2005 71 54,111
Fall 2005 29 16,832
Spring 2006 117 94,806
TOTAL 546 355,841
13The Instrument
- Health status and health problems
- Risk behaviors
- Protective behaviors
- Access to health information
- Perceived norms
- Health, health education, and safety
- Alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use
- Sexual behaviors
- Weight, nutrition, and exercise
- Mental and physical health
- Impediments to academic performance
- Demographics
14Reliability Validity Analyses
- Results are consistent with other nationally
generalizable data sets - National College Health Risk Behavior Survey CDC
1995 - Harvard School of Public Health 1999 College
Alcohol Study - United States Department of Justice The National
College Women Sexual Victimization Study 2000
(NCWSV) - National Institute of Mental Health 2001
15Reliability and Validity Analyses
- Reliability
- Cronbachs alpha scores for inter-item
reliability fall within the acceptable range of
0.4-0.9 - Construct Validity
- Measures related to other variables as expected
- Measurement Validity
- ACHA-NCHA found to have strong measurement
validity - Sensitive Indicators
- ACHA-NCHA found to have comparable rates of
sensitive item prevalence as other surveys
16ACHA Tools for Program Planning and Evaluation
17Health-related impediments to academic performance
Spring 2005 N 54,111
18Health-related impediments to academic performance
Spring 2005 N 54,111
Spring 2000 N 16,024
195 or more drinks at a sitting during the last 2
weeks
Spring 2005 N 54,111
205 or more drinks at a sitting during the last 2
weeks
Spring 2000 N 16,024
Spring 2005 N 54,111
21Estimated BAC
22Estimated BAC
Spring 2000 N 16,024 Spring 2000 N 16,024 Spring 2000 N 16,024 Spring 2000 N 16,024
Estimated Blood Alcohol Concentration Males Females Total
lt.08 65 64 64
lt.10 72 71 72
Spring 2005 N 54,111 Spring 2005 N 54,111 Spring 2005 N 54,111 Spring 2005 N 54,111
Estimated Blood Alcohol Concentration Males Females Total
lt.08 64 63 64
lt.10 71 71 71
23Sexual Partners
Spring 2005 N 54,111
24Sexual Partners
Spring 2000 N 16,024
Spring 2005 N 54,111
25So Depressed Difficult to Function
Spring 2005 N 54,111
26So Depressed Difficult to Function
Spring 2000 N 16,024
Spring 2005 N 54,111
27Seriously Considered Suicide
Spring 2005 N 54,111
28Seriously Considered Suicide
Spring 2005 N 54,111
Spring 2000 N 16,024
29Diagnosed with Depression
Spring 2005 (N54,111) Spring 2005 (N54,111) Spring 2005 (N54,111)
College students ever diagnosed with depression 16
Of this 16
Dx in the last school year 36
Currently in therapy 28
Currently taking medication 37
30Diagnosed with Depression
Spring 2005 (N54,111) Spring 2005 (N54,111) Spring 2005 (N54,111)
College students ever diagnosed w/ depression 16
Of this 10
Dx in the last school year 36
Currently in therapy 28
Currently taking medication 37
Spring 2000 (N16,024) Spring 2000 (N16,024) Spring 2000 (N16,024)
College students ever diagnosed w/ depression 10
Of this 10
Dx in the last school year 23
Currently in therapy 17
Currently taking medication 21
31Self Described Weight and BMI
Spring 2005 N 54,111
32How are campuses using ACHA-NCHA data?
- Develop and evaluate programs
- Allocate/advocate for resources
- Identify campus populations at increased risk
- Identify staff training needs
33How are campuses using ACHA-NCHA data?
- Gather normative data for social norms marketing
efforts - Consortium participation
- Longitudinal research efforts
- Measure progress on HC2010 objectives
34Healthy Campus 2010
HC2010 Objective 2000 Baseline 2010 Target Spring 2005 Progress
1-1. Increase the proportion of college students with health insurance 83.3 100 88.5
3-9a. Increase the proportion of college students who use sunscreen daily 14.7 23.9 18.2
3-11c. Increase the proportion of college women who received a routine GYN exam in the LSY 63.1 83.2 63.0
35For more information
- Mary Hoban, PhD, Director, ACHA-NCHA Program
Office mhoban_at_acha.org, - (410) 859-1500 x216
- Victor Leino, PhD, Research Director, ACHA
evl_at_acha.org, - (410) 859-1500 x239
- Pat Ketcham, PhD, ACHA-NCHA Advisory Committee
Chair, Oregon State University,
pat.ketcham_at_oregonstate.edu, - (541) 737-7553