Dietary habits and nutritional status of medical school students : the case of three state universities in Cameroon
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Date
Authors
Bede, Fala
Cumber, Samuel Nambile
Nkfusai, Claude Ngwayu
Venyuy, Mbinkar Adeline
Ijang, Yunga Patience
Wepngong, Emerson Njokah
Nguti Kien, Agatha Tanya
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
African Field Epidemiology Network
Abstract
INTRODUCTION : malnutrition is a major risk factor of cardiovascular and metabolic diseases and therefore the importance of good dietary practices
and balanced diet cannot be overemphasized. University students tend to have poor eating practices which is related to nutritional status. The
objective of our study was to assess the dietary practices of medical students, determine the prevalence of malnutrition among medical students and
factors associated with malnutrition. METHODS : we carried out a cross-sectional study from December 2013 to March 2014 involving 203 consenting
students in the Faculty of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences of the University of Yaoundé I, Faculties of Health Sciences of the Universities of Bamenda
and Buea. A three-part questionnaire (socio-demographic profile, eating practices, and anthropometric parameters). Data was analysed using SPSS
18.0. Frequencies and percentages were determined for categorical variables. Means and standard deviations (mean ± SD) were calculated for
continuous variables. Fischer's exact test was used to compare the categorical variables. Statistical significance was set at p ≤ 0.05. RESULTS : males
constituted 44.3% of respondents. The mean age was 20.8 ± 1.6yrs. Most students had a monthly allowance of less than 20 000frs (34 USD) and
59.1% lived alone. Most students (49.8%) reported taking two meals a day with breakfast being the most skipped meal while supper was the meal
most consumed by students. Snacking was common among these students as 40.8% admitted consuming snacks daily. Daily intake of milk, fruits,
vegetable and meat were low (6.2%, 4.3%, 20.0% and 21.3% respectively). The BMI status of students was associated with gender (p=0.026).
CONCLUSION : our findings showed a high prevalence of malnutrition of 29.4% based on BMI (underweight 4.9%, overweight 21.6% and obesity
3.0%) among second year medical students of these three state universities. Irregular meals, meal skipping, low fruit, vegetable and milk
consumption, high candy, fried foods and alcohol intakes were found to be poor eating practices frequent among these students. Our findings
therefore suggest the need for coordinated efforts to promote healthy eating habits among medical students in general and female medical students
in particular (and by extension youths in general) as a means of curbing malnutrition among youths.
Description
Keywords
University students, Medical students, Weight, Height, Nutritional status, Cameroon, Body mass index (BMI)
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Bede, F., Cumber, S.N., Nkfusai, C.N. et al. 2020, 'Dietary habits and nutritional status of medical school students : the case of three state universities in Cameroon', Pan African Medical Journal, vol. 35, no. 15, pp. 1-10.