Quick Virginia, Shoff Suzanne, Lohse Barbara, White Adrienne, Horacek Tanya, Greene Geoffrey
Department of Health Sciences, James Madison University, 801 Carrier Drive, MSC 4301, Harrisonburg, VA 22802, USA.
Department of Nutritional Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA.
Eat Behav. 2015 Dec;19:15-9. doi: 10.1016/j.eatbeh.2015.06.012. Epub 2015 Jul 2.
Little is known about the relationships between eating competence (intra-individual approach to eating and food-related attitudes and behaviors that entrain positive bio-psychosocial outcomes) and sleep behaviors and quality in college students, a high-risk group for poor eating habits, weight gain, and inadequate sleep. Thus, data from full-time college students (N=1035; 82% White; 61% female) aged 18-24 years from 5 U.S. universities were obtained from online questionnaires (eating competence (ecSI), Pittsburg Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), physical activity, demographics) and physical assessments (measured height, weight), to explore sleep behavior and quality between eating-competent (EC; ecSI score≥32) and non-EC groups (ecSI<32). Generalized linear models controlling for gender, body mass index, and physical activity were utilized. A higher proportion of those in the EC group reported adequate sleep quality (67% vs. 57% in non-EC, p=0.001), sleep duration of ≥7 h nightly (58% vs. 50% in non-EC, p=0.007), and infrequent daytime dysfunction (72% vs. 65% in non-EC, p=0.02). When ecSI scores were grouped as tertiles, those in the highest tertile reported a higher prevalence of no sleep disturbances (7% vs. 2% in the lowest ecSI tertile, p=0.006) and lower prevalence of sleep medication use (10% vs. 15% in the lowest ecSI tertile, p=0.04). Results suggest that competent eaters are more likely to have better overall sleep quality and fewer sleep-related issuescompared to less competent eaters. These findings may inform future longitudinal studies, and health promotion and weight management interventions for young adults.
对于饮食能力(即个体内在的饮食方式以及与食物相关的态度和行为,这些会带来积极的生物心理社会结果)与大学生睡眠行为和质量之间的关系,我们所知甚少。大学生是饮食习惯不良、体重增加和睡眠不足的高危人群。因此,我们从美国5所大学的18 - 24岁全日制大学生(N = 1035;82%为白人;61%为女性)中收集数据,通过在线问卷(饮食能力(ecSI)、匹兹堡睡眠质量指数(PSQI)、身体活动、人口统计学信息)和身体评估(测量身高、体重),来探究饮食能力强(EC;ecSI评分≥32)和饮食能力不强(ecSI < 32)两组人群的睡眠行为和质量。我们使用了控制性别、体重指数和身体活动的广义线性模型。饮食能力强的组中,报告睡眠质量良好的比例更高(67%,饮食能力不强组为57%,p = 0.001),每晚睡眠时间≥7小时的比例更高(58%,饮食能力不强组为50%,p = 0.007),白天功能障碍不频繁的比例更高(72%,饮食能力不强组为65%,p = 0.02)。当将ecSI评分分为三分位数时,处于最高三分位数的人群报告无睡眠障碍的患病率更高(7%,ecSI评分最低三分位数组为2%,p = 0.006),使用助眠药物的患病率更低(10%,ecSI评分最低三分位数组为15%,p = 0.04)。结果表明,与饮食能力较弱的人相比,饮食能力强的人更有可能拥有更好的整体睡眠质量和更少的睡眠相关问题。这些发现可能为未来的纵向研究以及针对年轻人的健康促进和体重管理干预提供参考。