饮食行为、社交媒体使用及其关联:印度医学本科生的横断面研究

N. Sawant, Shermeen Rajesh More, Shreyansh Dinesh Singh, Ansh Sanjay Agrawal, Ananya Chauhan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管印度年轻人,尤其是医科学生的异常饮食行为或失调的发生率越来越高,但有关这方面的数据却很少。此外,关于社交媒体的使用与异常饮食行为之间关系的文献也很少。 目的:评估医学生中异常饮食行为的发生率、社交媒体使用情况以及社交媒体使用与饮食行为之间的关联。 研究采用了两个量表:饮食三因素问卷-修订版 21 项(TFEQ-R21)和社交媒体对饮食行为的影响量表(SESMEB)。 22%的参与者报告了异常饮食行为。在社交媒体对饮食行为的影响方面,不同年级的学生有明显差异[f = 3.08, P = 0.02],最后一年的学生得分最低,而第一年的学生得分最高。使用 4 个以上社交媒体平台的学生的 SESMEB 分数较高 [t = -2.02,P < 0.04]。TFEQ的失控进食[r = 0.38, P = 0.01]、情绪化进食[r = 0.30, P = 0.01]和TFEQ总分[r = 0.40, P = 0.01]与SESMEB得分呈正相关。 本研究发现,医学生社交媒体使用量的增加与饮食行为异常之间存在明显的相关性。它强调了在制定社交媒体使用政策时考虑到饮食行为的必要性。
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Eating behaviours, social media usage, and its association: A cross-sectional study in Indian medical undergraduates
Despite increasing incidence, there is little data on abnormal eating behaviours or disorders in Indian youth, especially medical students. Additionally, little literature exists measuring the association of social media use with abnormal eating behaviours. To assess the prevalence of abnormal eating behaviours amongst medical students, social media usage, and any association of social media usage with eating behaviours. An online cross-sectional questionnaire-based study was conducted with 272 participants at a medical college, and two scales: the Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire-Revised 21items (TFEQ-R21) and the Scale of Effects of social media on Eating Behaviour (SESMEB) were used. 22% of the participants reported abnormal eating behaviours. A significant difference in the effect of social media on eating behaviour according to the year of study [f = 3.08, P = 0.02] was seen with the final years having the lowest and the first years having the highest SESMEB scores. Students using more than 4 social media platforms had a higher SESMEB score [t = -2.02, P < 0.04]. A positive correlation was seen between TFEQ domains such as uncontrolled eating [r = 0.38, P = 0.01], emotional eating [r = 0.30, P = 0.01], and TFEQ total score [r = 0.40, P = 0.01] with SESMEB scores. This study finds a significant correlation between increased social media usage and developing abnormal eating behaviours in medical students. It highlights the need for the creation of policies regulating social media use with eating behaviours in mind.
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