1 / 15

Alcohol Consumption & Weight Gain

Alcohol Consumption & Weight Gain. Alexandra Holzworth, Pauline Cornelius, Jessica Branch & Kali Gloer. Introductio n. Background Scientific Research Data from Relevant Studies A quarter of participants gained at least five pounds (Drew)

Télécharger la présentation

Alcohol Consumption & Weight Gain

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Alcohol Consumption & Weight Gain Alexandra Holzworth, Pauline Cornelius, Jessica Branch & Kali Gloer

  2. Introduction • Background Scientific Research • Data from Relevant Studies • A quarter of participants gained at least five pounds (Drew) • Alcohol causes an imbalance of energy chemicals in the body (Suter)

  3. Research Question • What attitudes do UGA undergraduates have towards weight gain as a result of alcohol consumption?

  4. Research Based Hypothesis • As UGA undergraduates’ weight gain as a result of alcohol consumption increases, UGA undergraduates’ attitude towards alcohol consumption with decrease. • Negatively related

  5. Method • Survey • 45 questions • Weight Gain as a Result of Alcohol Consumption (IV) • Weight Gain • Alcohol Consumption • Attitude (DV) • Influence/Reasons for Dinking • Perceptions of Alcohol

  6. Method • Observational Research • Observer as Participant • Variables of interest • Demographics • Price/Amount/Type of Alcohol Consumed • Food Consumption

  7. Method • Focus Groups • Two groups • 60 minute sessions • 4+ Participants per Group • 1+ Male (s), 1+ (s) Female

  8. Method • Hypothetical Experimental Design • Stratified Random Sampling • 100 UGA Undergraduate Students • 50 Male, 50 Female • Study Duration • 3 Months • Studied Factors • Weight Gain • Academic Performance • Money Spent

  9. Results-Quantitative • Survey • 74 Responses • College students 18-24 • 11 Male, 63 Female • Chi-Square Findings • Gender (IV) and Weight Gain (DV) • Asymptote Sig. = .000 • Gender (IV) and Willingness to Consume (DV) • Asymptote Sig. = .001 • Meaningful Difference between Expected and Observed

  10. Results-Quantitative • Survey • Correlation Tests • Continuous Variables • Willingness to Modify Frequency Alcohol Consumption vs. Willingness to Modify Caloric Intake • (r = .664 and p<.001) • Consuming Alcohol Because of Social Accepting vs. Consuming Alcohol To Boost Self Esteem • (r= .835 and p<.001)

  11. Results- Qualitative • Observational Research • 60 people Observed • 28 Male • 32 Female • Money>Taste>Calories • Eating Habits • Surroundings • Focus Group • Similar Settings • Varied Alcohol Preferences • Varied Consumption Frequencies • Weight Gain • Peer Pressure

  12. Discussion • Interpretation • UGA undergraduates have a negative toward weight gain as a result of alcohol consumption • Hypothesis supported • Contextual Importance • Many UGA undergraduates consume alcohol • Many UGA undergraduates gain weight • Spread Awareness of Adverse Health Effects • Inspire New Social Norms

  13. Limitations & Future Research • Limitations • Time Constraint • One-way ANOVA • Snowball Sampling

  14. Limitations & Future Research • Future Research • Compare alcohol consumption in various college campuses in Georgia/US • In depth questions about what college students would/would not be willing to change • Undergraduate behavior changes when given nutritional facts • Age/Gender/Socio-economic comparisons

  15. Cheers!

More Related