Risk assessment for type 2 diabetes mellitus and its association with knowledge and health beliefs among university students in three Arab countries
Hebatalla Abdelmaksoud Abdelmonsef Ahmed, Ahmed Yousef, Shady Mohamed Abdelwahab, Mohamed Adel Youssef, Samah Shalaby Elnozahy, Reema Saeed Almater, Lamia Ahmed Saddah, Methqal Al-Dhawi, Noor Ebrahim Naji Al-matari, Mohammed Al-azab, Hoda Ali Ahmed Shiba

TL;DR
This study examines type 2 diabetes risk, knowledge, and health beliefs among university students in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Yemen, finding significant differences between the countries.
Contribution
The study provides a multinational comparison of diabetes risk and health perceptions among university students in three Arab countries.
Findings
Egyptian students showed significantly higher diabetes knowledge compared to Saudi and Yemeni students.
Yemeni students had the highest diabetes risk, with 22.0% at severe risk.
Higher academic year and medical faculty enrollment were positively linked to better diabetes knowledge and health beliefs.
Abstract
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a growing concern in the Arab world, with university students increasingly at risk due to lifestyle factors. This study aims to assess T2DM risk, knowledge, and beliefs among university students aged ≥ 18 years in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Yemen. A multinational, cross-sectional study was conducted from January to April 2025 among university students aged ≥ 18 years in Egypt (lower-middle-income), Saudi Arabia (high-income), and Yemen (low-income). A multistage, stratified purposive sampling technique was used to recruit students equally from medical and non-medical faculties in at least three universities per country. Data were collected via structured, interview-based questionnaires consisting of four components: (1) socio-demographic and anthropometric data; (2) the Diabetes Knowledge Questionnaire-18 (DKQ-18); (3) the Health Belief Model Scale…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiabetes, Cardiovascular Risks, and Lipoproteins · Diabetes Management and Education · Health and Wellbeing Research
