# Do behavioural risks cluster among college students in Chandigarh, India? Novel insights from a latent class analysis

**Authors:** Vikas Kumar Bhatia, Adhish Kumar Sethi, Pratistha Sharma, Shubh Mohan Singh, Pinnaka Venkata Maha Lakshmi, Yasir Alvi, Bijit Biswas, Yuan-Pang Wang, Yuan-Pang Wang, Yuan-Pang Wang

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0340072 · PLOS One · 2026-01-02

## TL;DR

This study explores how different risky behaviors cluster among college students in Chandigarh, India, revealing patterns that could inform public health strategies.

## Contribution

The study introduces novel insights into behavioral risk clustering among Indian college students using latent class analysis.

## Key findings

- Four distinct behavioral risk classes were identified among students.
- Unhealthy diet and insufficient physical activity were the most common risks across all classes.
- Men were more likely to belong to higher-risk classes compared to women.

## Abstract

Youth is a critical phase in life, as behavioural risks in youth can have profound health impacts throughout the life course. Coexistence of behavioural risks is especially hazardous, and is important to address in public health interventions. Given the gaps in existing research on this issue, we aimed to determine the prevalence of multiple behavioural risks and identify their clustering among young adults in a prominent North Indian city.

We collected data from young adults aged 18–22 years in a representative survey conducted across six colleges, assessing injury risks, victimisation, suicide, substance use, diet and physical activity using a self-administered questionnaire. We determined the prevalences of individual risks. We then identified risk clustering using latent class analysis, with gender as a covariate. We selected the most appropriate latent class model based on fitted probabilities, likelihood ratio tests, entropy, Akaike information criterion and Bayesian information criterion.

Of 752 participating students with median age 19 years, 64.4% identified as female. Latent class analysis identified four classes: multiple risks (8.8%), smoking and alcohol-related risks (5.4%), only dietary and physical activity risks (73.7%), and victimisation and injury risks (12.1%). Unhealthy diet and insufficient physical activity were the most common risks, and occurred uniformly across classes. Men were more likely than women to belong to higher-risk classes.

Policymakers working for youth health must consider the interconnectedness of behavioural risks and their gender differentials, to simultaneously address multiple risk factors such as violence, unsafe sex and substance use.

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

79 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12758675/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12758675