First-year university is associated with greater body weight, body composition and adverse dietary changes in males than females.

BACKGROUND:The transition from high school to university life is a critical time for change, often accompanied by the adoption of negative lifestyle habits including unhealthy nutrition. The purpose of this longitudinal study was to identify sex-specific changes in dietary intake and diet quality, a...

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Main Authors: Kayleigh M Beaudry, Izabella A Ludwa, Aysha M Thomas, Wendy E Ward, Bareket Falk, Andrea R Josse
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218554
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spelling doaj-5239673daca149a2be5fe0b2afb16a9a2021-03-03T20:35:28ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01147e021855410.1371/journal.pone.0218554First-year university is associated with greater body weight, body composition and adverse dietary changes in males than females.Kayleigh M BeaudryIzabella A LudwaAysha M ThomasWendy E WardBareket FalkAndrea R JosseBACKGROUND:The transition from high school to university life is a critical time for change, often accompanied by the adoption of negative lifestyle habits including unhealthy nutrition. The purpose of this longitudinal study was to identify sex-specific changes in dietary intake and diet quality, and associated changes in body weight and composition during first-year university. METHODS:Three-hundred and one students (n = 229 females) completed food frequency questionnaires, and had their body weight, body composition, waist and hip circumference measured at the beginning and end of first-year university. Repeated-measures ANOVAs with covariate adjustments were used with variables for sex (between group) and time (within group) to assess these changes. RESULTS:Students gained body weight and fat during the year (p<0.001). Body mass Index (BMI) also significantly increased (p = 0.032). Males gained more weight (Male:3.8 kg; Female:1.8 kg), fat mass (Male:2.7 kg; Female:1.5 kg), lean mass (Male:1.1 kg; Female:0.3 kg) and BMI (Male:1.2 kg/m2; Female:0.7 kg/m2; p≤0.001 for interactions), and had greater increases in waist circumference (Male:2.7 cm; Female:1.1 cm) and waist:hip ratio (Male:0.02; Female:0.004; p<0.05 for interactions) than females. Energy intake remained the same over the year in both sexes, accompanied by an increase in alcohol (ethanol) in both sexes but more so in males than females (p = 0.011 interaction). Diet quality decreased, characterized by a reduced intake of healthy foods/beverages (p<0.05) in both sexes such as yogurt, cheese, oatmeal, breads, rice, pasta, vegetables, green salad, fruits, steak, fish, nuts and milk, and an increased consumption of unhealthy foods and beverages (p<0.05) such as donuts/cakes, fried chicken, beer and liquor. Significant interactions between sexes indicated that males displayed a more adverse and lower quality eating pattern which included greater intakes of donuts/cakes, fried chicken, beer and liquor, as well as decreased intakes of eggs and vegetables compared to females. Lastly, some dietary intake changes significantly correlated with fat mass and waist circumference change indicating that poor dietary choices were associated with increased adiposity. CONCLUSIONS:Our study demonstrated that during first-year university, both male and female students undergo unfavorable changes in nutrition and body weight/composition that significantly differ between sexes, with males showing more adverse changes. Our results can be used to inform effective sex-specific strategies and interventions to improve dietary habits during the transition to university life.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218554
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kayleigh M Beaudry
Izabella A Ludwa
Aysha M Thomas
Wendy E Ward
Bareket Falk
Andrea R Josse
spellingShingle Kayleigh M Beaudry
Izabella A Ludwa
Aysha M Thomas
Wendy E Ward
Bareket Falk
Andrea R Josse
First-year university is associated with greater body weight, body composition and adverse dietary changes in males than females.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Kayleigh M Beaudry
Izabella A Ludwa
Aysha M Thomas
Wendy E Ward
Bareket Falk
Andrea R Josse
author_sort Kayleigh M Beaudry
title First-year university is associated with greater body weight, body composition and adverse dietary changes in males than females.
title_short First-year university is associated with greater body weight, body composition and adverse dietary changes in males than females.
title_full First-year university is associated with greater body weight, body composition and adverse dietary changes in males than females.
title_fullStr First-year university is associated with greater body weight, body composition and adverse dietary changes in males than females.
title_full_unstemmed First-year university is associated with greater body weight, body composition and adverse dietary changes in males than females.
title_sort first-year university is associated with greater body weight, body composition and adverse dietary changes in males than females.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description BACKGROUND:The transition from high school to university life is a critical time for change, often accompanied by the adoption of negative lifestyle habits including unhealthy nutrition. The purpose of this longitudinal study was to identify sex-specific changes in dietary intake and diet quality, and associated changes in body weight and composition during first-year university. METHODS:Three-hundred and one students (n = 229 females) completed food frequency questionnaires, and had their body weight, body composition, waist and hip circumference measured at the beginning and end of first-year university. Repeated-measures ANOVAs with covariate adjustments were used with variables for sex (between group) and time (within group) to assess these changes. RESULTS:Students gained body weight and fat during the year (p<0.001). Body mass Index (BMI) also significantly increased (p = 0.032). Males gained more weight (Male:3.8 kg; Female:1.8 kg), fat mass (Male:2.7 kg; Female:1.5 kg), lean mass (Male:1.1 kg; Female:0.3 kg) and BMI (Male:1.2 kg/m2; Female:0.7 kg/m2; p≤0.001 for interactions), and had greater increases in waist circumference (Male:2.7 cm; Female:1.1 cm) and waist:hip ratio (Male:0.02; Female:0.004; p<0.05 for interactions) than females. Energy intake remained the same over the year in both sexes, accompanied by an increase in alcohol (ethanol) in both sexes but more so in males than females (p = 0.011 interaction). Diet quality decreased, characterized by a reduced intake of healthy foods/beverages (p<0.05) in both sexes such as yogurt, cheese, oatmeal, breads, rice, pasta, vegetables, green salad, fruits, steak, fish, nuts and milk, and an increased consumption of unhealthy foods and beverages (p<0.05) such as donuts/cakes, fried chicken, beer and liquor. Significant interactions between sexes indicated that males displayed a more adverse and lower quality eating pattern which included greater intakes of donuts/cakes, fried chicken, beer and liquor, as well as decreased intakes of eggs and vegetables compared to females. Lastly, some dietary intake changes significantly correlated with fat mass and waist circumference change indicating that poor dietary choices were associated with increased adiposity. CONCLUSIONS:Our study demonstrated that during first-year university, both male and female students undergo unfavorable changes in nutrition and body weight/composition that significantly differ between sexes, with males showing more adverse changes. Our results can be used to inform effective sex-specific strategies and interventions to improve dietary habits during the transition to university life.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218554
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