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The influence of chronotype on the body mass index of U.S. college students.
Bloom, Myra Jane; Jost, Scarlet Rae; Keating, Donald Paul; Lang, Andrew Stuart Ian Donald; Mankin, Nancy Viola; Mast, Zachary William; McMahan, Ericka Rachel; Merheb, Jonathan Abdou; Nelson, Philip Paul; Nnaji, Joshua Chinweoke; Valderrama, Enrique Francisco.
Afiliación
  • Bloom MJ; Oral Roberts University, University Libraries - Tulsa - OK - United States.
  • Jost SR; Oral Roberts University, Health, Leisure, & Sport Sciences - Tulsa - OK - United States.
  • Keating DP; Oral Roberts University, Health, Leisure, & Sport Sciences - Tulsa - OK - United States.
  • Lang ASID; Oral Roberts University, Computing & Mathematics - Tulsa - OK - United States.
  • Mankin NV; Oral Roberts University, Health, Leisure, & Sport Sciences - Tulsa - OK - United States.
  • Mast ZW; Oral Roberts University, Computing & Mathematics - Tulsa - OK - United States.
  • McMahan ER; Oral Roberts University, Behavioral Sciences - Tulsa - OK - United States.
  • Merheb JA; Oral Roberts University, School of Engineering - Tulsa - OK - United States.
  • Nelson PP; Oral Roberts University, Behavioral Sciences - Tulsa - OK - United States.
  • Nnaji JC; Oral Roberts University, Health, Leisure, & Sport Sciences - Tulsa - OK - United States.
  • Valderrama EF; Oral Roberts University, Computing & Mathematics - Tulsa - OK - United States.
Sleep Sci ; 15(Spec 2): 314-317, 2022.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35371401
ABSTRACT

Objectives:

The relationship between a college student's chronotype and body mass index (BMI) is important to understand for university decision makers who want to build healthy and inclusive academic communities. This study aimed to evaluate how a student's chronotype influences their BMI. Material and

Methods:

Participants were college students from Oral Roberts University (n=384) with a mean age of 18.94 years, a mean BMI of 24.7kg/m2, and a mean morningness-eveningness questionnaire (MEQ) score of 47.65.

Results:

BMI values were significantly correlated with both chronotype (r=-.11, ß=-.09, p=.03) and age (r=.12, ß=.53, p=.02). The rate at which BMI increased with age depended upon the student's chronotype (ß=.81-.005 / MEQ, p=.005). The later the chronotype, the higher the rate of increase. Race had no significant influence on MEQ or BMI values except in the case of students who identified as Black and female. These students were found, on average, to have significantly higher BMI values (p<.01).

Conclusion:

For college students, BMI tends to increase over time and at a rate that is dependent upon chronotype. The later the chronotype, the faster the rate at which BMI increases. BMI values were found to be significantly higher for Black females. However, this result is potentially spurious, as BMI does not take into account differences in body composition between genders and race/ethnicity groups.
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Texto completo: 1 Base de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies Idioma: En Revista: Sleep Sci Año: 2022 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies Idioma: En Revista: Sleep Sci Año: 2022 Tipo del documento: Article