Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > A systematic review of the association of diet ...

Associated organisational unit

Electronic data

  • HER-04-22-0098.R1_Proof_hi

    Accepted author manuscript, 875 KB, PDF document

    Available under license: CC BY: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

A systematic review of the association of diet quality with the mental health of university students: implications in health education practice

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

A systematic review of the association of diet quality with the mental health of university students: implications in health education practice. / Solomou, Solomis; Logue, Jennifer; Reilly, Siobhan et al.
In: Health Education Research, Vol. 38, No. 1, 28.02.2023, p. 28-68.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Author

Bibtex

@article{ae6647e1b00c4d63b706b6445cb5de20,
title = "A systematic review of the association of diet quality with the mental health of university students: implications in health education practice",
abstract = "University students are at risk of experiencing mental health problems during the transition from home to university. This transition can also adversely affect their diet quality. This review aims to examine bidirectional associations from observational studies regarding the influence of diet quality on the mental health of university students, and vice versa. The databases PubMed, CINAHL, EMBASE, PsycINFO, The Cochrane Library and Web of Science were searched using relevant search terms. The searches were last updated on 15 July 2022. Majority of studies (36 out of 45) found that good diet quality of students was associated with better mental health in terms of depression, anxiety, stress and overall general mental well-being. Moreover, majority of studies (19 out of 23) found that stress and anxiety of students were associated with poorer diet quality. The effect sizes observed were generally small–moderate. Healthy diets of students have been associated with better mental health in terms of depression, anxiety, stress or other mental health issues. Stress experienced by university students has been associated with unhealthy diets. There are implications for health education research, as interventions to improve diet quality at the university level could reduce mental health issues; additionally, interventions to support students under stress may lead to healthier dietary habits when living on campuses. Randomized controlled trials and intervention studies are needed to further investigate these implications.",
author = "Solomis Solomou and Jennifer Logue and Siobhan Reilly and Guillermo Perez-Algorta",
year = "2023",
month = feb,
day = "28",
doi = "10.1093/her/cyac035",
language = "English",
volume = "38",
pages = "28--68",
journal = "Health Education Research",
issn = "0268-1153",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A systematic review of the association of diet quality with the mental health of university students

T2 - implications in health education practice

AU - Solomou, Solomis

AU - Logue, Jennifer

AU - Reilly, Siobhan

AU - Perez-Algorta, Guillermo

PY - 2023/2/28

Y1 - 2023/2/28

N2 - University students are at risk of experiencing mental health problems during the transition from home to university. This transition can also adversely affect their diet quality. This review aims to examine bidirectional associations from observational studies regarding the influence of diet quality on the mental health of university students, and vice versa. The databases PubMed, CINAHL, EMBASE, PsycINFO, The Cochrane Library and Web of Science were searched using relevant search terms. The searches were last updated on 15 July 2022. Majority of studies (36 out of 45) found that good diet quality of students was associated with better mental health in terms of depression, anxiety, stress and overall general mental well-being. Moreover, majority of studies (19 out of 23) found that stress and anxiety of students were associated with poorer diet quality. The effect sizes observed were generally small–moderate. Healthy diets of students have been associated with better mental health in terms of depression, anxiety, stress or other mental health issues. Stress experienced by university students has been associated with unhealthy diets. There are implications for health education research, as interventions to improve diet quality at the university level could reduce mental health issues; additionally, interventions to support students under stress may lead to healthier dietary habits when living on campuses. Randomized controlled trials and intervention studies are needed to further investigate these implications.

AB - University students are at risk of experiencing mental health problems during the transition from home to university. This transition can also adversely affect their diet quality. This review aims to examine bidirectional associations from observational studies regarding the influence of diet quality on the mental health of university students, and vice versa. The databases PubMed, CINAHL, EMBASE, PsycINFO, The Cochrane Library and Web of Science were searched using relevant search terms. The searches were last updated on 15 July 2022. Majority of studies (36 out of 45) found that good diet quality of students was associated with better mental health in terms of depression, anxiety, stress and overall general mental well-being. Moreover, majority of studies (19 out of 23) found that stress and anxiety of students were associated with poorer diet quality. The effect sizes observed were generally small–moderate. Healthy diets of students have been associated with better mental health in terms of depression, anxiety, stress or other mental health issues. Stress experienced by university students has been associated with unhealthy diets. There are implications for health education research, as interventions to improve diet quality at the university level could reduce mental health issues; additionally, interventions to support students under stress may lead to healthier dietary habits when living on campuses. Randomized controlled trials and intervention studies are needed to further investigate these implications.

U2 - 10.1093/her/cyac035

DO - 10.1093/her/cyac035

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36441584

VL - 38

SP - 28

EP - 68

JO - Health Education Research

JF - Health Education Research

SN - 0268-1153

IS - 1

ER -