Eating Habits, Physical Activity, and Their Associated Factors among Vietnamese School Children
Main Article Content
Abstract
The purposes of this study were to examine eating habits and physical activity and determine association between eating habits and physical activity, and study factors, including age, gender, weight, years of study, mothers’ education and family income among Vietnamese school children. Sample included 227 school children currently studying in grade 3-7 in primary and secondary schools children in Ho Chi Minh city, Vietnam. Stratified random sampling was used to recruit the sample. Data were collected from February – April 2012. Research instruments contained the demographic information form, the eating habits
and the physical activity questionnaires, which their internal consistency reliability of .80 and
.82 respectively. Data were analyzed by using descriptive statistics, Pearson correlation, t-test and one-way ANOVA. Results revealed that mean total score of eating habits was 31.18 (S.D.=5.08), and of physical activity was 10.31 (S.D. = 2.82), which could be implied that the sample had high health eating habits while it had moderate healthy physical activity. There were significant correlations between eating habits and child age (r=-0.22, p=<.01), physical activity and child age (r=-0.19, p<.01), and physical activity and weight (r=-.15,
p<.05). Significant differences of eating habits and physical activity were found between the
children with different family incomes (<5,000,000/>5,000.000) (t=-4.05, p<.001 and t=2.87, p<.01). The results also showed significant differences of eating habits and physical activity over the differences of the child’s years of study (F=4.97, p<.01 and (F=2.67, p<.05). In addition, eating habits of the sample with different mother’s education was significantly difference (F=28.86, p<.001). These finding suggest that nurse should promote and encourage older and heavier school children as well as children with different family income, years of study and mother’s education to have better and more appropriate eating habits and physical activity.
Article Details
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
The authors retain copyright and permit the journal the copyright of first publication
Articles, once having passed the review process and accepted for publication in the CDMH Journal, are copyrighted under the CDMH Journal, Department of Mental Health, Ministry of Public Health. Please be aware distribution of CDMH Journal content for commercial purposes without permission is expressly prohibited. However, distribution with intent to educate, advocate, or spread awareness within the general public and research communities is permitted and encouraged with the understanding that the CDMH Journal Editorial Board do not hold jurisdiction or liability for any accompanying comments, text, or information from third parties, either in favor for or against the original article’s assertions, conclusions, methodology, or content.