View : 744 Download: 0

Associations between Self-Reported Sleep Quality and Duration and Dietary Consumptions, Psychological Symptoms, and Obesity in Korean Adults

Title
Associations between Self-Reported Sleep Quality and Duration and Dietary Consumptions, Psychological Symptoms, and Obesity in Korean Adults
Authors
Kang B.Doo M.Kim Y.
Ewha Authors
김양하두미애
SCOPUS Author ID
김양하scopus; 두미애scopus
Issue Date
2017
Journal Title
Preventive Nutrition and Food Science
ISSN
2287-1098JCR Link
Citation
Preventive Nutrition and Food Science vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 271 - 276
Keywords
Dietary carbohydratesObesityPsychological variablesSleep durationSleep quality
Publisher
Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition
Indexed
SCOPUS; KCI scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Sleep pattern disruptions have been reported to be associated with an increased risk of obesity. This studywas performed to investigate the association between sleep quality and sleep duration with dietary consumption, psychological factors, and obesity in Korean adults. A total of 288 Korean men and women who visited a public health center were included in this study. Data on general characteristics, health-related habits, psychological symptoms, dietary intake, and sleep patterns (including quality and duration) were collected using self-report questionnaires. Approximately half of the included Korean adults experienced sleep of low quality and short duration. Subjects who reported short sleep durations had a significantly higher weight (P=0.015), body mass index (P<0.001), and prevalence of obesity (P=0.012) than those reporting proper sleep durations. After adjustment for covariates, subjects reporting short sleep durations consumed more dietary carbohydrates (P=0.043) and higher levels of perceived stress (P=0.001), depression (P=0.001), and anxiety (P<0.001) than subjects reporting proper sleep durations. However, obesity-related variables, dietary intake and psychosocial symptoms did not differ significantly by reported sleep quality. The results of this study demonstrated that sleep duration but not sleep quality was associated with dietary macronutrient intake and psychological symptoms, which might affect obesity.
DOI
10.3746/pnf.2017.22.4.271
Appears in Collections:
신산업융합대학 > 식품영양학과 > Journal papers
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML


qrcode

BROWSE