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Weekday breakfast habits and mood at the start of the school morning

URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10497/24193
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Type
Article
Files
 NH-2022-105413.pdf (396.11 KB)
Citation
Kawabata, M., Burns, S. F., Choo, H.-C., & Lee, K. (2024). Weekday breakfast habits and mood at the start of the school morning. Nutrition and Health, 30(1), 149-156. https://doi.org/10.1177/02601060221105413
Author
Kawabata, Masato
•
Burns, Stephen Francis 
•
Choo, Hui-Cheng
•
Lee, Kerry
Abstract

Background
Good nutrition, regular physical activity, and adequate sleep are important for promoting health. However, it is not well characterized how these lifestyle behaviours are associated with mood at the start of school days.

Aim
To identify the weekday health-related behaviours (breakfast intake, physical activity, and sleep) of Singaporean adolescents and explore their associations with mood at the beginning of the school morning.

Methods
365 adolescents (52.3% boys, 47.7% girls) aged 14–19 years (M = 16.9, SD = 1.3 years) completed a survey set on breakfast habits, physical activity participation, sleep duration, and mood.

Results
More than one-third (38.6%) of participants never (15.0%) or irregularly (23.6%) consumed breakfast on weekdays. Adolescents consuming breakfast irregularly reported significantly higher negative mood scores than regular breakfast consumers (p = .002; d = .404). Almost two-thirds (64.1%) of adolescents did <60 min of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) on weekdays and reported lower positive morning mood scores than those who ≥60 min of MVPA (p = .014; d = .284). Although most (88.3%) adolescents slept <8 h each night, sleep duration was not related to either positive mood or negative mood.

Conclusion
The present study suggests that eating breakfast on a regular basis and completing for ≥60 min of weekday MVPA are useful behaviours to start school days in a better mood. Parents and health educators should recognise the importance of establishing these habits and support students by instigating practical approaches so they can achieve a regular breakfast intake and physical activity engagement.

Keywords
  • Breakfast

  • Exercise

  • Moods

  • Moderate-to-vigorous ...

  • Sleep

Date Issued
2024
Publisher
Sage
Journal
Nutrition and Health
DOI
10.1177/02601060221105413
Dataset
https://doi.org/10.25340/R4/CTWVCQ
Project
OER 1/13 SFB
Funding Agency
Ministry of Education, Singapore
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