Eating disorders in medicine university students in a city in the interior of the state of São Paulo Brazil
M. C. V. R. De Oliveira, C. B. Soares de Oliveira, N. D. Rejali, M. B. Machado, M. H. Formaio, S. Umbelino da Silva

TL;DR
This study explores eating disorders among medical students in Brazil, finding notable rates of disordered eating behaviors and highlighting the need for lifestyle and therapeutic interventions.
Contribution
The study provides novel insights into eating disorders among medical students in a specific Brazilian university setting.
Findings
26.4% of participants reported having little time to eat, and 46.2% did not prepare their own meals.
The ECAP binge eating score showed that 74.7% had no binge eating, 16.5% had moderate, and 8.8% had severe levels.
Lunch was consumed by all participants, but supper was the least consumed meal at 17.6%.
Abstract
Eating disorders are characterized by a persistent disturbance in eating and/or eating-related behavior, resulting in altered food consumption or absorption, which can significantly compromise physical health as well as psychosocial functioning. These disorders are closely linked with stressful experiences which university students configure a group prone to development. The objective is to evaluate the impact of eating disorders on young people when entering and staying at university. This is an observational, quantitative, analytical and cross-sectional study, in which 1300 (one thousand and three hundred) medical students were invited, of both sexes and over 18 years of age from the 1st (first) to the 12th (twelfth) year. period of the Medicine course at the University of Oeste Paulista (UNOESTE) with 91 students joining. A structured interview was applied via online, aiming at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEating Disorders and Behaviors · Occupational Health and Burnout · Physical Education and Gymnastics
