Health Related Nutritional Knowledge and Dietary Behavior Regarding Caffeine Intake among High School Students in Yongin Region

Objectives We aimed to examine health-related nutritional knowledge and dietary behavior related to caffeine intake among high school students (n = 310) in the Yongin region of Korea. Methods Data were collected using a face-to-face survey, and analyzed using chi-square test, t- test, and logistic r...

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Main Author: Seong Yeong Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korea Centers for Disease Control & Prevention 2018-12-01
Series:Osong Public Health and Research Perspectives
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ophrp.org/upload/phrp-9-6/ophrp-09-299.pdf
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spelling doaj-4920d1bd96284cd6a1da749f9b8e8daa2020-11-25T01:25:38ZengKorea Centers for Disease Control & PreventionOsong Public Health and Research Perspectives2210-90992018-12-019629930810.24171/j.phrp.2018.9.6.033417Health Related Nutritional Knowledge and Dietary Behavior Regarding Caffeine Intake among High School Students in Yongin RegionSeong Yeong KimObjectives We aimed to examine health-related nutritional knowledge and dietary behavior related to caffeine intake among high school students (n = 310) in the Yongin region of Korea. Methods Data were collected using a face-to-face survey, and analyzed using chi-square test, t- test, and logistic regression analysis. Results The level of caffeine intake in respondents was divided into low (< 30 mg/d; n = 208) and high caffeine intake groups (> 30 mg/d; n = 102). Total nutritional knowledge related to bone disease was higher in the low intake group (score 2.75) than the high intake group (score 2.39; p < 0.05). The high intake group had lower scores for nutritional knowledge (score 0.70; p < 0.05) related to how caffeinated beverages affect sleep and for dietary behavior (score 3.25; p < 0.001), based on “I avoid caffeinated foods before sleep,” than the low intake group (nutritional knowledge score, 0.80; dietary behavior score, 3.76). Conclusion In the overall analysis, the low caffeine intake group had better nutritional knowledge related to bone and sleep health, and healthier dietary behavior related to sleep health compared with the high intake group.http://ophrp.org/upload/phrp-9-6/ophrp-09-299.pdfadolescentcaffeinehealth
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Seong Yeong Kim
spellingShingle Seong Yeong Kim
Health Related Nutritional Knowledge and Dietary Behavior Regarding Caffeine Intake among High School Students in Yongin Region
Osong Public Health and Research Perspectives
adolescent
caffeine
health
author_facet Seong Yeong Kim
author_sort Seong Yeong Kim
title Health Related Nutritional Knowledge and Dietary Behavior Regarding Caffeine Intake among High School Students in Yongin Region
title_short Health Related Nutritional Knowledge and Dietary Behavior Regarding Caffeine Intake among High School Students in Yongin Region
title_full Health Related Nutritional Knowledge and Dietary Behavior Regarding Caffeine Intake among High School Students in Yongin Region
title_fullStr Health Related Nutritional Knowledge and Dietary Behavior Regarding Caffeine Intake among High School Students in Yongin Region
title_full_unstemmed Health Related Nutritional Knowledge and Dietary Behavior Regarding Caffeine Intake among High School Students in Yongin Region
title_sort health related nutritional knowledge and dietary behavior regarding caffeine intake among high school students in yongin region
publisher Korea Centers for Disease Control & Prevention
series Osong Public Health and Research Perspectives
issn 2210-9099
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Objectives We aimed to examine health-related nutritional knowledge and dietary behavior related to caffeine intake among high school students (n = 310) in the Yongin region of Korea. Methods Data were collected using a face-to-face survey, and analyzed using chi-square test, t- test, and logistic regression analysis. Results The level of caffeine intake in respondents was divided into low (< 30 mg/d; n = 208) and high caffeine intake groups (> 30 mg/d; n = 102). Total nutritional knowledge related to bone disease was higher in the low intake group (score 2.75) than the high intake group (score 2.39; p < 0.05). The high intake group had lower scores for nutritional knowledge (score 0.70; p < 0.05) related to how caffeinated beverages affect sleep and for dietary behavior (score 3.25; p < 0.001), based on “I avoid caffeinated foods before sleep,” than the low intake group (nutritional knowledge score, 0.80; dietary behavior score, 3.76). Conclusion In the overall analysis, the low caffeine intake group had better nutritional knowledge related to bone and sleep health, and healthier dietary behavior related to sleep health compared with the high intake group.
topic adolescent
caffeine
health
url http://ophrp.org/upload/phrp-9-6/ophrp-09-299.pdf
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