| Literature DB >> 27066257 |
Mee Young Hong1, Tahirih L Shepanski1, Jaclyn B Gaylis1.
Abstract
Maintaining healthy eating habits in college is challenging. Interventions focused on nutrition education can assist in reversing these trends of poor eating habits among college students. The purpose of the study was to identify factors affecting the dietary habits, food choices and BMI of college females majoring in nutrition (NMs) compared with non-nutrition majors (OMs). A questionnaire-based cross-sectional survey study of dietary behaviour and food frequency of 202 college females was conducted at San Diego State University. Data were analysed by using t tests, χ(2) tests and regression analysis in SPSS. NMs exhibited a lower BMI than OMs (P < 0·01); however, BMI values for both groups were within a healthy range. Interestingly, 3 % of NMs had a BMI in the range of overweight or obese; however, prevalence was three times higher for OMs, being 9·2 %. A healthier meal option was the most influential factor in NMs' meal choices whereas convenience and weight control were influential factors in OMs' meal choices. Most NMs read nutrition labels and reported that this affects their food choices. NMs exercised longer than OMs in the <120 min/week category. Exercise affected healthy meal conception in NMs only (P < 0·001). Taking dietary supplements influenced healthy meal awareness in OMs only (P < 0·05). University-level nutrition education is strongly associated with healthier eating habits and superior food choices among young adult females. More regular meal patterns, healthier snack choice and adherence to dietary guidelines may contribute to the lower BMI values observed among NMs compared with OMs.Entities:
Keywords: BMI; College students; Dietary habits; Health behaviour; Majoring in nutrition; NMs, nutrition major students; OMs, non-nutrition major students; SDSU, San Diego State University
Year: 2016 PMID: 27066257 PMCID: PMC4791520 DOI: 10.1017/jns.2015.24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr Sci ISSN: 2048-6790
Characteristics of participating female college students
(Mean values and standard deviations or percentages)
| NMs ( | OMs ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | Mean | |||
| Age (years) | 24·3 | 3·9 | 22·4 | 4·0 |
| Weight (kg) | 58·8 | 7·4 | 60·3 | 9·1 |
| Height (cm) | 166·4 | 6·6 | 166·0 | 7·5 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 21·2 | 2·0 | 21·3 | 3·1 |
| BMI classification (%) | ||||
| Underweight | 5·9 | 6·1 | ||
| Normal | 91·1 | 84·7 | ||
| Overweight/obese | 3·0 | 9·2 | ||
| Ethnicity (%) | ||||
| White | 77·2 | 81·2 | ||
| Black | 2·0 | 2·0 | ||
| Hispanic | 12·9 | 5·9 | ||
| Asian | 1·0 | 5·9 | ||
| Other | 6·9 | 5·0 | ||
NMs, nutrition major students; OMs, non-nutrition major students.
Mean values were significantly different between NMs and OMs (P < 0·05, n 202; non-paired t tests).
BMI classification: <18·5 kg/m2 = underweight; 18·5 to 24·9 kg/m2 = normal; >25·0 kg/m2 = overweight/obese.
Female college students’ lifestyle habits and health practices (%)
| NMs ( | OMs ( | Overall | |
|---|---|---|---|
| No smoking | 91 | 84 | 88 |
| Alcohol drinking | 70 | 76 | 73 |
| Sleep sufficient | 69 | 68 | 69 |
| Stress | |||
| Slight | 52 | 52 | 52 |
| Very | 45 | 52 | 44 |
| Try to lose body weight | 48 | 53 | 51 |
| To improve health | 45 | 40 | 42 |
| To look better | 52 | 53 | 53 |
| How to control body weight | |||
| Diet control | 20 | 11 | 16 |
| Exercise | 35 | 58 | 47 |
| Both | 40 | 22 | 31 |
NMs, nutrition major students; OMs, non-nutrition major students.
NMs mainly changed their dietary and exercise habits while OMs mainly focused on enhancing their exercise (P < 0·05, n 202; χ2 test).
Female college students’ exercise frequency and duration
(Mean values and standard deviations or percentages)
| NMs ( | OMs ( | Overall | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | Mean | Mean | ||||
| Exercise (d/week) | 3·24 | 1·91 | 3·07 | 1·90 | 3·15 | 1·91 |
| Exercise (min/d) | 62·3 | 37·7 | 58·0 | 40·8 | 60·2 | 39·3 |
| Exercise (min/week) | 240 | 189 | 212 | 208 | 226 | 199 |
| <120 min/week (min/week) | 26·1 | 37·6 | 7·2 | 16·6 | 16·7 | 26·9 (28) |
| Percentage | 23 | 33 | 28 | |||
| 120–210 min/week (min/week) | 187·6 | 93·0 (33) | 176·0 | 77·8 | 181·8 | 93·0 |
| Percentage | 33 | 26 | 30 | |||
| >210 min/week (min/week) | 388·2 | 93·0 | 397·6 | 80·9 | 392·9 | 93·0 |
| Percentage | 44 | 41 | 42 | |||
NMs, nutrition major students; OMs, non-nutrition major students.
NMs recorded higher average exercise time compared with OMs in the category of <120 min/week (P < 0·05, n 202; non-paired t tests).
Fig. 1.(a) Dietary habits on breakfast eating and snack choices between nutrition major students (NMs; □) and non-nutrition major students (OMs; ■). (b) Influencing factors in meals between NMs and OMs. * P < 0·05 (n 202; χ2 analysis). Values are percentages.
Fig. 2.(a) Nutritional label reading between nutrition major students (NMs; □) and non-nutrition major students (OMs; ■). (b) Source of nutrition information between NMs and OMs. * P < 0·05 (n 202; χ2 analysis). Values are percentages.
Adherence to Dietary Guidelines for Americans (%)
| Guideline | Practise? | NMs ( | OMs ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eat a variety of foods | Well | 60·4 | 36·6 | |
| Try | 39·6 | 53·5 | <0·001 | |
| Don't | 0·0 | 9·9 | ||
| Balance food and physical activity | Well | 49·5 | 32·7 | |
| Try | 44·6 | 56·4 | 0·041 | |
| Don't | 5·9 | 10·9 | ||
| Choose plenty of grains, vegetables and fruit | Well | 73·0 | 37·6 | |
| Try | 26·0 | 54·5 | <0·001 | |
| Don't | 1·0 | 7·9 | ||
| Choose diet low in fat, saturated fat and cholesterol | Well | 62·4 | 26·7 | |
| Try | 34·7 | 59·4 | <0·001 | |
| Don't | 3·0 | 13·9 | ||
| Choose diet moderate in sugars | Well | 36·6 | 20·0 | |
| Try | 58·4 | 57·0 | <0·001 | |
| Don't | 5·0 | 23·0 | ||
| Choose diet moderate in salt and Na | Well | 39·0 | 24·0 | |
| Try | 49·0 | 47·0 | 0·005 | |
| Don't | 12·0 | 29·0 | ||
| Alcohol in moderation | Well | 52·6 | 37·8 | |
| Try | 33·0 | 44·9 | 0·110 | |
| Don't | 14·4 | 17·3 |
NMs, nutrition major students; OMs, non-nutrition major students.
NMs mainly changed their dietary and exercise habits while OMs mainly focused on enhancing their exercise (P < 0·05, n 202; χ2 test).
Correlation of health behaviours with BMI
| Coefficient | ||
|---|---|---|
| Feels fatty | 0·629 | <0·001 |
| Try to lose weight | 0·156 | 0·029 |
| Choose grains, fruit and vegetables | −0·178 | 0·012 |
| Choose low fat | −0·169 | 0·017 |
| Salad consumption | −0·216 | 0·014 |
| Soda consumption | 0·173 | 0·050 |
| Read nutrition label | −0·159 | 0·028 |
Correlations using Spearman's ρ analyses between certain health behaviours and BMI demonstrate that healthy habits tend to result in a lower BMI (P ≤ 0·05, n 202).
Regression on factors affecting perception of a healthy meal*
(Regression coefficients)
| NMs ( | OMs ( | Overall | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variables | B | B | B | |||
| Age | 0·056 | <0·001 | 0·046 | 0·026 | 0·061 | <0·001 |
| Weight | −0·004 | 0·603 | 0·006 | 0·552 | 0·001 | 0·889 |
| Height | 0·005 | 0·609 | 0·016 | 0·163 | 0·012 | 0·124 |
| BMI | 0·033 | 0·284 | 0·033 | 0·923 | 0·024 | 0·245 |
| Exercise time | 0·001 | <0·001 | 0·000 | 0·494 | 0·001 | 0·003 |
| Eating breakfast | 0·448 | 0·013 | 0·698 | <0·001 | 0·661 | <0·001 |
| Dietary supplement | 0·059 | 0·161 | 0·194 | 0·001 | 0·120 | 0·001 |
| Read nutrition label | 0·690 | 0·267 | 0·542 | 0·007 | 0·711 | 0·001 |
| Nutrition guideline | ||||||
| Eat a variety of foods | 0·469 | <0·001 | 0·499 | <0·001 | 0·599 | <0·001 |
| Balance food and physical activity | 0·270 | 0·007 | 0·484 | <0·001 | 0·433 | <0·001 |
| Grains, vegetables and fruit | 0·511 | <0·001 | 0·544 | <0·001 | 0·605 | <0·001 |
| Fat, saturated fat and cholesterol | −0·330 | 0·003 | −0·662 | <0·001 | −0·580 | <0·001 |
| Sugars | −0·350 | 0·001 | −0·551 | <0·001 | −0·530 | <0·001 |
| Salt and Na | −0·237 | 0·010 | −0·477 | <0·001 | −0·422 | <0·001 |
NMs, nutrition major students; OMs, non-nutrition major students.
Regression analyses indicated that there were some different factors affecting perception of a healthy meal between NMs and OMs (P < 0·05, n 202).