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MALAYSIAN JOURNAL
OF |
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NUTRITION |
Official publication of
the Nutrition
Society of Malaysia
Since March 1995
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March
2002, Volume 8 No. 1
ARTICLE 6
Gender Differences in Eating
Behavior and Social Self Concept among Malaysian University Students
Khor Geok Lin1,
Lynne Cobiac2 & Grace Skrzypiec2
1 Department of Nutrition and Health Sciences,
Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Universiti Putra Malaysia,
43400 UPM Serdang Selangor, Malaysia
2 Health Sciences and Nutrition, Commonwealth Scientific
and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), Adelaide, South
Australia 5000, Australia
ABSTRACT
University students may
encounter personal, family, social, and financial stresses while
trying to cope with their academic challenges. Such constraints
could affect their eating behavior and health status which, in turn
may have negative effects on their studies. In light of little
information in Malaysia on this subject, this study was undertaken
on a sample of 180 students pursuing different academic programs in
a Malaysian university. The study objectives were to determine the
students’ eating behavior including body weight control and the
extent of fear of being fat, their social self concept that reflects
the five selves namely, the psychological self, the social self, the
sexual self, the family self and the physical self. Eating behavior
and social self concept were determined based on various methods
previously validated in studies on young adults in Asia and
Australia. This article focuses on gender comparisons for these
determinants. The results showed that psychological and emotional
factors have a significant bearing on the eating behavior of
university students. Uninhibited eating behavior of both the males
and females showed significant and negative correlations with
feelings pertaining to personal worth, the physical self, and their
relationships with peers and families. Gender differences were
manifested for some determinants. The females showed more restrained
eating behavior than the males; the females have a significantly
higher score for family relationship, which appears to be a
significant factor on male students’ eating behavior. Future studies
on a larger sample size may help to unravel the extent to which
psychological factors influence eating behavior of students, and the
underlying psychosocial basis for some of the gender differences
reported in this study.
Full
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