Gender Differences in Healthy Lifestyle, Body Consciousness, and the Use of Social Networks among Medical Students
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Population
2.2. Data Collection
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- The first part of the questionnaire gathered sociodemographic and anthropometric data (age, gender, marital status, environment, members of the household, average monthly financial income, weight, height, body mass index).
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- The second section contained items evaluating students’ perception about healthy lifestyle. The items were constructed as an open-ended question (such as changes considered necessary in students’ eating behavior, reasons why a healthy lifestyle is needed, reasons why they practice/would like to practice physical activity, aspects that prevent them from maintaining a healthy lifestyle). One item referred to the free association method and asked students to write the first 5 words that came to their mind when they thought of a healthy lifestyle.
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- The third part of the questionnaire addressed the Body Consciousness Scale developed by Miller, Murphy, and Buss in 1981 [27]. This instrument is a self-report tool that includes 3 subscales related to private body consciousness (awareness of internal sensations), public body consciousness (awareness of observable aspects of body), and body competence. Respondents had to indicate their level of correspondence with the 15 statements using a 5-item Likert-type scale. Answers included “extremely uncharacteristic”, “uncharacteristic”, “neutral”, “characteristic”, and “extremely characteristic”. The minimum score possible for each question is 0 and the maximum is 4. Subjects’ scores were calculated on each separate scale by adding each item’s score and forming 3 subscale composites.
- −
- The fourth section included items related to body image and aimed to identify the main characteristics that students associated with their body, the opinion about the importance of body image today, and the level of satisfaction with their body image. The answers were rated on a Likert-type scale from 1 to 10, where 1 = very dissatisfied and 10 = very satisfied.
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- The fifth section comprised questions focusing on the use of social media and the relationship with body image (the use of social networks, the frequency, the reason why these were used, the impact these had on students, the emotional state created by following the posts of colleagues or celebrities, the influence of social networks in students’ tendency to compare themselves with other people, the influence of social networks in the way students perceived their own body, etc.).
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- In the sixth section, students were asked to open a separate document, draw the first thing that came into their mind when they thought of a healthy lifestyle, and upload that document in the space provided within the questionnaire.
2.3. Statistical Analysis
2.4. Ethical Approval
3. Results
3.1. Sociodemographic and Anthropometric Data
3.2. Overview of the Questionnaire Results
3.2.1. Theme 1: Personal Reflections of a Healthy Lifestyle
3.2.2. Theme 2: Changes in Lifestyle
3.2.3. Theme 3: Perception of Body Image
3.2.4. Theme 4: Use of Social Media
3.3. Body Consciousness Scale (BCQ)
- Private body (representing the disposition to focus on internal bodily sensations)—M = 13.19 ± 2.89,
- Public body (which involves a chronic tendency to focus on and be concerned with the external appearance of the body)—M = 17.68 ± 3.22,
- Body competence (which refers to effective body functioning)—M = 9.83 ± 2.13.
3.4. Drawings
4. Discussion
5. Strengths and Limitations of the Study
6. Reflections and Planning
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Sociodemographic and Anthropometric Characteristics | M ± S.D and % |
---|---|
Age | 20.09 ± 2.47 |
Gender | |
Male | 19 (24.7%) |
Female | 58 (75.3%) |
Environment of origin | |
Urban | 42 (54.5%) |
Rural | 35 (45.5%) |
Marital status | |
Married | 4 (5.2%) |
Unmarried | 73 (94.8%) |
Members of the household | |
Single | 12 (15.6%) |
Colleagues/friends | 41 (53.2%) |
Partner | 9 (11.7%) |
Parents | 15 (19.5%) |
Average monthly financial income | |
20–100 € | 28 (36.4%) |
100–200 € | 26 (33.8%) |
200–400 € | 15 (19.5%) |
>400 € | 8 (10.4%) |
Weight | 64.58 ± 14.75 |
Body mass index | 22.14 ± 3.50 |
Nutritional status | |
Underweight | 11 (14.3%) |
Normal weight | 50 (64.9%) |
Overweight | 12 (15.6%) |
Obese class I | 4 (5.2%) |
Subscales | Men | Women | Differences |
---|---|---|---|
Private Body Consciousness | 11.00 ± 3.16 | 13.91 ± 2.42 | p = 0.000 |
Public Body Consciousness | 15.31 ± 3.36 | 18.46 ± 2.79 | p = 0.000 |
Body Competence | 9.26 ± 2.49 | 10.01 + 1.99 | p = 0.183 |
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Pop, L.-M.; Iorga, M.; Șipoș, L.-R.; Iurcov, R. Gender Differences in Healthy Lifestyle, Body Consciousness, and the Use of Social Networks among Medical Students. Medicina 2021, 57, 648. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina57070648
Pop L-M, Iorga M, Șipoș L-R, Iurcov R. Gender Differences in Healthy Lifestyle, Body Consciousness, and the Use of Social Networks among Medical Students. Medicina. 2021; 57(7):648. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina57070648
Chicago/Turabian StylePop, Lavinia-Maria, Magdalena Iorga, Lucian-Roman Șipoș, and Raluca Iurcov. 2021. "Gender Differences in Healthy Lifestyle, Body Consciousness, and the Use of Social Networks among Medical Students" Medicina 57, no. 7: 648. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina57070648
APA StylePop, L. -M., Iorga, M., Șipoș, L. -R., & Iurcov, R. (2021). Gender Differences in Healthy Lifestyle, Body Consciousness, and the Use of Social Networks among Medical Students. Medicina, 57(7), 648. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina57070648