Abstract

Introduction: The Mediterranean diet (MedD)is a characteristic eating pattern of the countries of the Mediterranean region. Nonetheless, is unknown its adherence in medical students. We aimed to determine the prevalence of adherence to the Mediterranean diet (AMedD) and associated factors in medical students from Peru.

Material and methods: Analytical cross-sectional study carried out by means of a virtual survey. PREDIMED scale was used to evaluate AMedD. The factors assessed were age, sex, academic year, body mass index (BMI), place of lunch consumption, cigarette smoking, and physical activity. Poisson regression with robust variance was used to present it in crude and adjusted prevalence ratios (PRa).

Results: High AMedD was present in 38.50%. Statistically significant association was found for sex (PRa: 0.623; 95%CI 0.488-0.796); for overweight (PRa: 0.417; 95%CI 0.270-0.644), obesity (PRa: 0.591; 95%CI 0.400-0.874) versus normopese; cigarette smoking (PRa: 0.450; 95%CI 0.263-0.773); and high physical activity (PRa: 1.652; 95%CI 1.233-2.215).

Conclusions: AMedD was low. The related factors were sex, BMI, consumption of lunch outside the home, cigarette smoking, and a high level of physical activity. If this is confirmed in future studies, it would be necessary to consider these elements to encourage greater consumption of MedD components by students, which would help to improve their long-term health.

Details

Title
Factors associated with adherence to the Mediterranean diet among medical students at a private university in Lima, Peru
Author
Victor Juan Vera-Ponce; Jamee Guerra Valencia; Torres-Malca, Jenny Raquel; Zuzunaga-Montoya, Fiorella E; Gianella, Zulema Zeñas-Trujillo; Cruz-Ausejo, Liliana; Loayza-Castro, Joan A; Jhony A De La Cruz-Vargas
First page
em483
Section
Original Article
Publication year
2023
Publication date
Aug 2023
e-ISSN
25163507
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2810276869
Copyright
© 2023. This work is published under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.