Acceptance rate | 46% |
---|---|
Time to first decision | 6 months* |
Time to decision with review | 50 days* |
*Approximate number of days
**The days mentioned above are averages and do not indicate exact durations. The process may vary for each article.
ACTA Pharmaceutica Sciencia
2024 , Vol 62 , Num 1
The relationship between healthy living-style behaviors and type-2 diabetes risk of students of health sciences
1 Marmara University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Nutrition and Dietetics Department, Istanbul, Türkiye2 Sultanbeyli State Hospital, Istanbul, Türkiye
3 Istanbul Atlas University, Wellness Center, Istanbul, Türkiye
4 Ali Osman Sönmez Oncology Hospital, Bursa, Türkiye
5 Istanbul Medeniyet University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Nutrition and Dietetics Department, Istanbul, Türkiye
DOI : 10.23893/1307-2080.APS6214 Viewed : 2210 - Downloaded : 721 The aim of this study was to determine the relationship between healthy lifestyle behaviors and risk of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus of students, and also to compare the sub-dimensions of Healthy Living-Style Behaviors Scale-? (HLBS-II) with the anthropometry and general characteristics. Socio-demographic form, HLBS-II and The Finnish Diabetes Risk Score (FINDRISC) were used and anthropometric measurements were taken. With the increase in waist/height ratio, physical activity sub-dimension of HLBS-II was affected (p<0.05). The medical check-up status effected every sub-dimension and the total score of HLBS-II (p<0.001). With the increase in waist/hip ratio of female students, FINDRISC also increased (p<0.001). As the waist/height ratio increased, the mean scores of FINDRISC also increased (p<0.001). Students with a BMI value ?30 had higher FINDRISC scores (p<0.001). There is a negative relationship between HLBS-II total score, nutrition, self-actualization, and stress management, which are subdimensions of HLBS-II, and FINDRISC scores of students of health sciences. Keywords : Type 2 Diabetes, FINDRISC, HLBS II, health behavior, university students