Funding and college-provided nutritional resources on diet quality among female athletes.

Academic Article

Abstract

  • ObjectiveTo examine funding and college-provided nutritional resources and to assess whether these are associated with diet quality and subsequent dietitian referral among female collegiate athletes of different sports levels. Participants: Female athletes (N = 120) from NCAA, NJCAA, and Club sports. Methods: Differences in questionnaire-based demographics, diet quality, and dietitian referrals were analyzed using Kruskal-Wallis and Chi-Square tests, with p < 0.05. Factors associated with diet quality and dietitian referral were examined using regression. Results: NCAA reported more funding than Club and NJCAA (p < 0.05). NJCAA expressed insufficient funds for purchasing food and reported fewer college-provided nutritional resources (p < 0.05) while showing lower diet quality scores and higher subsequent dietitian referrals than NCAA and Club. No significant associations for dietary quality and dietitian referrals were found. Conclusions: Athletes across all sports levels reported insufficient funds for purchasing food and low diet quality, with NJCAA, showing the least funding and fewest nutritional resources.
  • Authors

  • Vento, Kaila A
  • Delgado, Ferdinand
  • Skinner, Jensen
  • Wardenaar, Floris C
  • Status

    Publication Date

  • 2023
  • Has Subject Area

    Published In

    Keywords

  • Dietitian
  • finances
  • meals
  • nutrition
  • scholarship
  • Digital Object Identifier (doi)

    Pubmed Id

  • 34379567
  • Start Page

  • 1732
  • End Page

  • 1739
  • Volume

  • 71
  • Issue

  • 6