Eating Patterns of school children and adolescents in Kuala Lumpur

Eating patterns such as eating frequency, skipping of breakfast, and frequency of meals eaten away from home might influence school-going children's nutri- tional status, which will then influence their health and academic performance. This article reports the findings of a survey on the eating...

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Main Authors: Moy, Foong Ming, Gan, Chong Ying, Mohd Kassim, Siti Zaleha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2006
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/4532/1/Eating_pattern_of_school_children_%26_adolescents_in_Kuala_Lumpur.pdf
http://eprints.um.edu.my/4532/
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Institution: Universiti Malaya
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spelling my.um.eprints.45322021-01-15T08:07:08Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/4532/ Eating Patterns of school children and adolescents in Kuala Lumpur Moy, Foong Ming Gan, Chong Ying Mohd Kassim, Siti Zaleha R Medicine Eating patterns such as eating frequency, skipping of breakfast, and frequency of meals eaten away from home might influence school-going children's nutri- tional status, which will then influence their health and academic performance. This article reports the findings of a survey on the eating patterns of the school children and adolescents in Kuala Lumpur. A total of 3620 school children studying in Primary 5, Secondary 2 and Secondary 4 were selected using multi-stage sampling. The students were surveyed using a pre-tested questionnaire while their weights and heights were measured in the field. It was found that 19.9 skipped at least one meal a day with the youngest group having the lowest prevalence. The most frequently missed meal is breakfast (12.6) followed by lunch (6.7) and dinner (4.4). The school is an important provider of breakfast and lunch for the students. As the students' age increased, the prevalence of eating breakfast and lunch in school increased. The youngest age group had the highest prevalence of snacking and taking of nutritional supplements (p<0.05). Fast food and local hawker food were also consumed by about 60-70 of the students. Logistic regression analysis showed that skipping of breakfast is significantly associated with age, sex, BMI and taking of nutritional supplements. Promotion of healthy eating should be targeted at students in primary and secondary schools as they tend to depend on outside food. 2006 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.um.edu.my/4532/1/Eating_pattern_of_school_children_%26_adolescents_in_Kuala_Lumpur.pdf Moy, Foong Ming and Gan, Chong Ying and Mohd Kassim, Siti Zaleha (2006) Eating Patterns of school children and adolescents in Kuala Lumpur. Malaysian Journal of Nutrition, 12 (1). pp. 1-10. ISSN 1394-035X
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
language English
topic R Medicine
spellingShingle R Medicine
Moy, Foong Ming
Gan, Chong Ying
Mohd Kassim, Siti Zaleha
Eating Patterns of school children and adolescents in Kuala Lumpur
description Eating patterns such as eating frequency, skipping of breakfast, and frequency of meals eaten away from home might influence school-going children's nutri- tional status, which will then influence their health and academic performance. This article reports the findings of a survey on the eating patterns of the school children and adolescents in Kuala Lumpur. A total of 3620 school children studying in Primary 5, Secondary 2 and Secondary 4 were selected using multi-stage sampling. The students were surveyed using a pre-tested questionnaire while their weights and heights were measured in the field. It was found that 19.9 skipped at least one meal a day with the youngest group having the lowest prevalence. The most frequently missed meal is breakfast (12.6) followed by lunch (6.7) and dinner (4.4). The school is an important provider of breakfast and lunch for the students. As the students' age increased, the prevalence of eating breakfast and lunch in school increased. The youngest age group had the highest prevalence of snacking and taking of nutritional supplements (p<0.05). Fast food and local hawker food were also consumed by about 60-70 of the students. Logistic regression analysis showed that skipping of breakfast is significantly associated with age, sex, BMI and taking of nutritional supplements. Promotion of healthy eating should be targeted at students in primary and secondary schools as they tend to depend on outside food.
format Article
author Moy, Foong Ming
Gan, Chong Ying
Mohd Kassim, Siti Zaleha
author_facet Moy, Foong Ming
Gan, Chong Ying
Mohd Kassim, Siti Zaleha
author_sort Moy, Foong Ming
title Eating Patterns of school children and adolescents in Kuala Lumpur
title_short Eating Patterns of school children and adolescents in Kuala Lumpur
title_full Eating Patterns of school children and adolescents in Kuala Lumpur
title_fullStr Eating Patterns of school children and adolescents in Kuala Lumpur
title_full_unstemmed Eating Patterns of school children and adolescents in Kuala Lumpur
title_sort eating patterns of school children and adolescents in kuala lumpur
publishDate 2006
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/4532/1/Eating_pattern_of_school_children_%26_adolescents_in_Kuala_Lumpur.pdf
http://eprints.um.edu.my/4532/
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