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Sex Differences in Lifestyle Behaviors among U.S. College Freshmen

Within lifestyle behavior research, the sex of populations causes differences in behaviors and outcomes of studies. This cross-sectional study investigated lifestyle behavior patterns in college students, examining sex differences in four areas: Nutrition, physical activity, sleep, and stress. Data...

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Published in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2019-02, Vol.16 (3), p.482
Main Authors: Olfert, Melissa D, Barr, Makenzie L, Charlier, Camille C, Greene, Geoffrey W, Zhou, Wenjun, Colby, Sarah E
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container_title International journal of environmental research and public health
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creator Olfert, Melissa D
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description Within lifestyle behavior research, the sex of populations causes differences in behaviors and outcomes of studies. This cross-sectional study investigated lifestyle behavior patterns in college students, examining sex differences in four areas: Nutrition, physical activity, sleep, and stress. Data from over 1100 college freshmen across 8 United States universities were used for this cross-sectional analysis. Self-reported data assessed fruit and vegetable intake, fat percent intake, physical activity, perceived stress, and sleep quality. Statistical analysis included Pearson chi-squared and Mann⁻Whitney's U tests for scores by sex. Likewise, healthy cut-offs were used to determine frequency of participants within range of the five tools. Males reported higher intake of both fruits and vegetables, and percent energy from fat than females. Males also reported higher physical activity levels, lower stress levels, and poorer sleep quality than females. Of the five self-reported tools, males were found to have a larger frequency of participants with healthy ranges than females. In a large college freshmen sample, sex was found to be related to general lifestyle behaviors which strengthen results reported in the previous literature. These findings shed light on the need for lifestyle behavior interventions among at-risk college students to enhance their behaviors to healthy levels.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/ijerph16030482
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source Publicly Available Content Database; PubMed Central; Free Full-Text Journals in Chemistry
subjects Adolescent
Behavior
College campuses
College students
Colleges & universities
Cross-Sectional Studies
Diet
Exercise
Female
Females
Food consumption
Fruit
Fruits
Gender differences
Health Behavior
Health promotion
Health Status
Humans
Life Style
Lifestyles
Male
Males
Nutrition
Nutrition research
Physical activity
Physical fitness
Quality
Self Report
Sex differences
Sex Factors
Sexes
Sleep
Stress
Stress, Psychological - epidemiology
Students - statistics & numerical data
Studies
United States - epidemiology
Universities - statistics & numerical data
Vegetables
Womens health
Young Adult
Young adults
title Sex Differences in Lifestyle Behaviors among U.S. College Freshmen
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