2014
DOI: 10.3998/jmmh.10381607.0008.101
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Prevalence of Risk Behaviors among U.S. Muslim College Students

Abstract: Limited data exists on alcohol, illicit drug, tobacco, gambling, and non-marital sexual intercourse among Muslim college students; behaviors which are either prohibited or strongly discouraged in Islam. To provide preliminary baseline data, we assessed prevalence of these risk behaviors using a U.S. 2001 national college survey. Of the 10,401 students surveyed, 135 (1.3%) reported they were raised in Muslim families. The past year prevalence of risk behaviors among the 135 students was 46.2% for alcohol, 24.6%… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…Religious identity may be unique from other social identities (e.g., ethnic and national identity) because it is attached to a highly appraised and sacred belief system and serves as a moral compass that can be particularly adaptive for religious minority youth with immigrant backgrounds (see Fleischmann & Verkuyten, forthcoming; Phalet et al., ). Accordingly, greater identification with their religious group may indeed serve a protective role to deflect youth from engaging in externalizing behaviors due to the unique function and prescriptive moral qualities of their religious identity and strong prohibitions against these behaviors within the Islamic faith (Ahmed, Abu‐Ras, & Arfken, ). In contrast to externalizing behaviors, Islam does not condemn internalizing problems, such as depression and anxiety, but instead offers solutions and promotes individuals to seek resources to cope with mental health problems.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Religious identity may be unique from other social identities (e.g., ethnic and national identity) because it is attached to a highly appraised and sacred belief system and serves as a moral compass that can be particularly adaptive for religious minority youth with immigrant backgrounds (see Fleischmann & Verkuyten, forthcoming; Phalet et al., ). Accordingly, greater identification with their religious group may indeed serve a protective role to deflect youth from engaging in externalizing behaviors due to the unique function and prescriptive moral qualities of their religious identity and strong prohibitions against these behaviors within the Islamic faith (Ahmed, Abu‐Ras, & Arfken, ). In contrast to externalizing behaviors, Islam does not condemn internalizing problems, such as depression and anxiety, but instead offers solutions and promotes individuals to seek resources to cope with mental health problems.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to the Council on American–Islamic Relations (Council on American‐Islamic Relations, ), there are between 6 and 7 million Muslims in the United States. Researchers studying Muslim mental health have found that Muslims face many psychosocial issues across five domains including global, larger and local community, interpersonal, and intrapersonal contexts (Ahmed, Abu‐Ras, & Arfken, ; Aloud & Rathur, ; Goforth, Oka, Leong, & Denis, ; Nadal et al, ; Tummala‐Narra & Claudius, ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…community, interpersonal, and intrapersonal contexts (Ahmed, Abu-Ras, & Arfken, 2014;Aloud & Rathur, 2009;Goforth, Oka, Leong, & Denis, 2014;Nadal et al, 2012;Tummala-Narra & Claudius, 2013).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to Ahmed, Abu-Ras, and Arfken (2014), American Muslim adolescents face many of the same health risks as their non-Muslim peers. In their national study of college students, tobacco usage among Muslim college students was 37%, a similar rate compared to non-Muslim college students (41%).…”
Section: Muslims In the United Statesmentioning
confidence: 99%