Skipping breakfast associated with socioeconomic and lifestyle factors in Brazilian adolescents

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Abstract

The aim is to estimate the prevalence and evaluate the association of socioeconomic and lifestyle factors with skipping breakfast among Brazilian adolescent students. A cross-sectional study carried out with adolescent ninth-graders from Brazilian public and private schools par-ticipating in the 2015 National School Health Survey. The prevalence of skipping breakfast (less than five days/week) and its respective 95% confidence intervals were estimated and stratified by gender according to demographic, socioeconomic, and lifestyle factors, self-perceived body image, and attitudes towards weight. A three-block hier-archical Poisson regression, considering the com-plex sample design. The prevalence of skipping breakfast was 35.6%, higher among girls than boys. In both genders, skipping breakfast was pos-itively associated with the highest socioeconomic level, morning school shift, paid work, regular consumption of alcoholic beverages, living only with the mother, the father or neither, the irreg-ular consumption of school food and meals with parents, considering oneself too fat/fat and trying to lose weight. In general, skipping breakfast was associated with socioeconomic factors and lifestyle behaviors harmful to health among adolescent students.

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APA

da Silva, P. A. S., Froelich, M., Rodrigues, P. R. M., de Souza, B. da S. N., Gorgulho, B., Moreira, N. F., & Muraro, A. P. (2022). Skipping breakfast associated with socioeconomic and lifestyle factors in Brazilian adolescents. Ciencia e Saude Coletiva, 27(10), 4051–4062. https://doi.org/10.1590/1413-812320222710.04702022

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