Covıd-19 Salgını Sürecinde Adölesanlarda Yeme Zamanı, Yeme Davranışı ve Uyku Kalitesinin Obezite ile İlişkisi
Özet
Obesity is rapidly increasing in adolescent individuals, and
factors underlying this condition, such as sleep quality, duration and eating behavior
changes, are gaining importance. The aim of the study is to reveal the relationship
between eating time, eating behavior and sleep quality and obesity of adolescent
individuals who were subject to confinement during the Covid-19 epidemic. In the
research conducted with 162 volunteer participants (120 girls, 42 boys) between the
ages of 12-18 living in Izmir, data were collected by survey technique. Questionnaire;
It consists of 8 sections: Personal Information, General Health Status, Anthropometric
Measurements, Nutritional Habits, Physical Activity Status, Three-Factor Eating Test,
Sleep Quality Scale and Sleep Variables Questionnaire. As a result, BMI values before
and after the pandemic were generally in the 5-85 percentile and 85-95 percentile
groups, and it was determined that they didn’t differ according to gender. It was
concluded that the majority of the participants had regular weekday and weekend
meals. It was observed that there was only a very weak positive relationship (r=0.000)
between the BMI of individuals with ≥95. percentile and lunch time. It was found that
there was a very weak negative (r=-0.046) relationship between sleep quality and BMI
before the pandemic, and a very weak positive relationship (r=0.035) after the
pandemic. Among eating behaviors, it was observed that there was only a very weak
positive relationship (r=0.032) between pre-pandemic BMI and the level of conscious
eating restriction. It was concluded that there is a very weak positive relationship
(r=0.016) between body weight change and sleep quality. It was determined that there
was a moderate positive relationship between sleep quality score and uncontrolled
eating level, emotional eating level and hunger sensitivity level for each of them
(r=0.560, r=0.528, r=0.569) and a weak positive relationship between conscious eating
restriction and eating habits (r=0.435). According to the results of the study, it is
recommended to establish quality sleep and nutrition habits and increase physical
activity to prevent obesity in adolescents.