Study Protocol of “Sustainably Healthy—From Science 2 Highschool & University”—Prevalence of Mixed, Vegetarian, and Vegan Diets Linked to Sports & Exercise among Austrian Tertiary Students and Lecturers/Academic Staff
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Objectives and Hypotheses
- The first and major goal of this college/university study is to survey the prevalence of omnivorous, vegetarian, and vegan diets linked to levels of sports & exercise;
- The second goal is to investigate the health-related behaviors of adults but particularly those of emerging adulthood (students) at tertiary educational entities;
- The third goal is to validate the self-reported data regarding lifestyle habits with a special focus on diet type and engagement in sports & exercise.
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Study Design
3.2. Sample
3.3. Inclusion Criteria
3.4. Questionnaire
3.5. Procedure and Trial Status
3.6. Outcome Measures
3.6.1. Primary Outcome Measures
3.6.2. Further Outcome Measures
3.7. Ethical Principles
3.7.1. Written Informed Declaration of Consent and Publication
3.7.2. Vote of the Ethics Board of the main Tertiary Educational Entities
3.7.3. Duties on Part of the Investigators
3.7.4. Assessment of the Benefit–Risk Ratio
3.8. Data Security
3.9. Power Analysis, Calculation of Case Number Scenarios and Representativity
- (i)
- Students. For the estimation of a proportion of 15.1% (two sided 95%-CI) ± 2.5% accuracy, a sample size of n = 788 is required after data clearance;
- (ii)
- Lecturers/Academic Staff. For the estimation of a proportion of 9.45% (two sided 95%-CI) ± 2.5% accuracy, a sample size of n = 526 is required after data clearance.
3.10. Statistical Methods and Data Analysis
4. Discussion and Future Perspectives
4.1. Dual Approach of Health
4.2. Diet Type
4.3. The COVID-19 Pandemic and Health-Related Behaviors
4.4. Education and Health
4.5. Health at College/University Setting
4.6. Practical Implications
- The justification of the fundamental dual approach of “Healthy Eating, Active Living” [22,23] as a minimum recommendation for sustainable health, which—based on sound evidence—is considered a highly effective, safe, and low-cost strategy to promote the health of students and lecturers/academic staff in order to tackle individual and public health issues, and ultimately help improve health status and prevent NCDs;
- Encouraging policy and decision makers (e.g., federal authorities, stakeholders, board of deans, educational multipliers, and even families) to reflect, evaluate, and update the current health promotion offers, and to implement the dual approach to health in everyday scenarios and situations at tertiary educational settings and environments (e.g., curricula, sports & exercise opportunities, public catering of buffets, canteens, and cafeterias);
- Developing evidence-based and up-to-date health-related knowledge, skills, and competencies required for a sustainable health-orientated action readiness (regardless of socioeconomic background) through competence-oriented teaching to help achieve better individual health and develop professional health-related qualifications, particularly in emerging adulthood.
- Transfer the results to the public by first addressing the college/university settings, students (any discipline; not only limited to future teachers and doctors), and lecturers/academic staff as education professionals and health multipliers;
- Translate the findings into health-orientated actions and sustainable health-related action readiness (e.g., by recommending this safe, effective, and low-cost dual tool to policy and decision makers, multipliers, and experts in the health and education sector) by means of implementing this approach in tertiary teaching and training and everyday scenarios as a basic extension of the tertiary educational entity that is applicable for different populations (e.g., family, community, teachers, therapists, family/primary care and specialized physicians, dietitians, nutrition and sports experts, and educational supervisors/coaches);
- Apply the results most effectively in everyday college and university scenarios through creating and implementing further tertiary curricula-based competence-orientated education and training offers and raising awareness of state-of-the-art knowledge, skills, and competencies in order to (i) empower the peer group of tertiary students, and (ii) establish the basic dual approach for sustainable health as a minimum recommendation for health promotion in tertiary curricula as an educative, teaching, and research goal in line with the state mandate, thus seamlessly closing the gap between secondary and tertiary educational levels. By deliberately promoting the qualifications required to manage long-term individual health throughout (updated) tertiary level curricula, the evolution of programs and modules with regard to compulsory introductory and basic courses leading to advanced and in-depth courses and materials, especially for, but not limited to, future teachers and doctors, lecturers/academic staff, will ultimately aid to improve the future public health of nations.
4.7. Limitations and Strengths
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Mensink et al. (2016) [47] German Norm Population (18–69 Years) | Wirnitzer et al. (2021) [98] Austrian Secondary Level Pupils (10–19 Years) | Wirnitzer et al. (2022) [99] Austrian Secondary Teachers/Principals (20–65 Years) | |
---|---|---|---|
Confidence level | 95% | 95% | 95% |
Alternative Hypothesis | 2-sided interval | 2-sided interval | 2-sided interval |
Expected proportion (%) | 6.5% | 15.1% | 9.45% |
Margin of Error (ME; distance from proportion to limit) | 2.5% | 2.5% | 2.5% |
Power (accepted min. 80%) | 96% (0.96) | 91% (0.91) | 100% (0.1) |
Number per cell per stratum | 374 | 788 | 526 |
df (n) | Effect Size (w) | Level of Significance | Power | N (Total) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Students [diet] | 2 | 0.12 | 0.05 | 0.8 | 694 |
[diet] * [age * sex] | 6 | 0.10 | 0.05 | 0.8 | 1363 |
[diet] * [age * sex * field of study] | 14 | 0.10 | 0.05 | 0.8 | 1834 |
Lecturers/Academic Staff [diet] | 2 | 0.13 | 0.05 | 0.8 | 573 |
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Wirnitzer, K.C.; Motevalli, M.; Tanous, D.R.; Wirnitzer, G.; Wagner, K.-H.; Cocca, A.; Schätzer, M.; Kirschner, W.; Drenowatz, C.; Ruedl, G. Study Protocol of “Sustainably Healthy—From Science 2 Highschool & University”—Prevalence of Mixed, Vegetarian, and Vegan Diets Linked to Sports & Exercise among Austrian Tertiary Students and Lecturers/Academic Staff. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 15313. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192215313
Wirnitzer KC, Motevalli M, Tanous DR, Wirnitzer G, Wagner K-H, Cocca A, Schätzer M, Kirschner W, Drenowatz C, Ruedl G. Study Protocol of “Sustainably Healthy—From Science 2 Highschool & University”—Prevalence of Mixed, Vegetarian, and Vegan Diets Linked to Sports & Exercise among Austrian Tertiary Students and Lecturers/Academic Staff. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(22):15313. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192215313
Chicago/Turabian StyleWirnitzer, Katharina C., Mohamad Motevalli, Derrick R. Tanous, Gerold Wirnitzer, Karl-Heinz Wagner, Armando Cocca, Manuel Schätzer, Werner Kirschner, Clemens Drenowatz, and Gerhard Ruedl. 2022. "Study Protocol of “Sustainably Healthy—From Science 2 Highschool & University”—Prevalence of Mixed, Vegetarian, and Vegan Diets Linked to Sports & Exercise among Austrian Tertiary Students and Lecturers/Academic Staff" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 22: 15313. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192215313
APA StyleWirnitzer, K. C., Motevalli, M., Tanous, D. R., Wirnitzer, G., Wagner, K. -H., Cocca, A., Schätzer, M., Kirschner, W., Drenowatz, C., & Ruedl, G. (2022). Study Protocol of “Sustainably Healthy—From Science 2 Highschool & University”—Prevalence of Mixed, Vegetarian, and Vegan Diets Linked to Sports & Exercise among Austrian Tertiary Students and Lecturers/Academic Staff. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(22), 15313. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192215313