Telles Shirley, Sharma Sachin Kumar, Gandharva Kumar, Prasoon Kumari, Balkrishna Acharya
Division of Yoga and Clinical Neurophysiology, Patanjali Research Foundation, Haridwar, Uttarakhand, India.
Department of Yoga, University of Patanjali, Haridwar, Uttarakhand, India.
Int J Yoga. 2023 Jan-Apr;16(1):20-26. doi: 10.4103/ijoy.ijoy_195_22. Epub 2023 Jul 10.
Previous surveys from countries other than India reported positive health behaviors in yoga practitioners. The present study aimed to determine with respect to yoga practitioners in India: (i) percentages of yoga practitioners who consumed specific foods, had additional physical activity and leisure activity, (ii) the association between these choices and their yoga practice, and (iii) the association of yoga with adding or avoiding specific foods and with meal timings in a day.
This convenience hybrid-mode sampling survey was conducted on 551 yoga-experienced persons.
(1) Yoga practitioner respondents ate fruits and vegetables regularly (62.1%), did not consume animal source products (69.2%), alcohol (98.0%), or tobacco (98.4%), had a regular physical activity other than yoga (77.5%) and leisure activities (92.2%). (2) More than 150 min/week of yoga practice and experience of yoga exceeding 60 months was (a) significantly associated with (i) regular consumption of fruits and vegetables, (ii) lower consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages, animal source foods, tobacco, and alcohol ( < 0.05, Chi-square test) and (b) not associated with physical activity or leisure activities ( > 0.05, Chi-square test). (3) Yoga practitioners excluded sugar-sweetened beverages, animal-source foods and fast foods from their diet, whereas they added fruits, vegetables, and plant-based juices to their diet, with earlier first and last meals for the day.
In India, yoga practitioner respondents' choices for foods, physical activity, and leisure conform to accepted positive health behaviors. The exclusion of animal-source foods emphasizes the need for well-planned and fortified diets among vegan yoga practitioners.
来自印度以外国家的先前调查显示,瑜伽练习者有积极的健康行为。本研究旨在确定印度瑜伽练习者的以下情况:(i)食用特定食物、进行额外体育活动和休闲活动的瑜伽练习者的百分比;(ii)这些选择与他们的瑜伽练习之间的关联;(iii)瑜伽与添加或避免特定食物以及一天中的用餐时间之间的关联。
对551名有瑜伽经验的人进行了这项便利混合模式抽样调查。
(1)瑜伽练习者受访者经常食用水果和蔬菜(62.1%),不食用动物源产品(69.2%)、酒精(98.0%)或烟草(98.4%),除瑜伽外有规律的体育活动(77.5%)和休闲活动(92.2%)。(2)每周瑜伽练习超过150分钟且瑜伽经验超过60个月与以下情况显著相关:(i)经常食用水果和蔬菜;(ii)较少食用含糖饮料、动物源食物、烟草和酒精(卡方检验,P<0.05),且与体育活动或休闲活动无关(卡方检验,P>0.05)。(3)瑜伽练习者在饮食中排除了含糖饮料、动物源食物和快餐,而在饮食中添加了水果、蔬菜和植物性果汁,且一天中的第一餐和最后一餐时间更早。
在印度,瑜伽练习者受访者在食物、体育活动和休闲方面的选择符合公认的积极健康行为。排除动物源食物凸显了纯素瑜伽练习者精心规划和强化饮食的必要性。