Associations between diet quality, food insecurity, physical activity, social connectedness and depressive symptomology in Australian university students: a cross-sectional study
Simone O’Neill, Michelle Minehan, Catherine R. Knight-Agarwal, Vivienne Lewis, David B. Pyne

TL;DR
This study explores how diet quality, food insecurity, physical activity, and social connections relate to depression in Australian university students.
Contribution
The study identifies food insecurity and physical activity as significant contributors to depressive symptoms in university students.
Findings
Severe food insecurity was found in 25% of students, with 70% experiencing mild–severe depression.
Food insecurity and physical activity accounted for 11% and 9% of the variation in depression scores, respectively.
Diet quality and social connectedness did not show significant associations with depressive symptoms.
Abstract
Rising prevalence of depression demands focus on modifiable factors to improve mental health outcomes. An inverse relationship has been identified between diet quality and depressive symptomology. This cross-sectional study aimed to examine how food insecurity, physical activity and social connectedness contribute to the relationship between diet quality and depressive symptomology. Data was collected from adult university students (n = 145, age = 26.9 ± 9.9 years) between July and October 2024 using an electronic survey. Included scales were the Diet Screening Tool, the US Adult Food Security Module, the International Physical Activity Questionnaire, the Social Connectedness Scale and the Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale—21. Pearson’s correlation analyses and linear regression were performed exploring the associations for variables of interest. The university student cohort was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFood Security and Health in Diverse Populations · Nutritional Studies and Diet · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet
