Thanawala, NinadRubinow, DaveRoga, ZacharyLiou, Harris2018-04-272018-04-272018-04-27https://hdl.handle.net/1813/57013A cross-sectional study was conducted to assess food security, diet quality, and physical activity in college students using a sample of NHANES data on the United States. Prevalence rates of participants achieving full food security, >50 Healthy Eating Index (HEI)-2010 composite score, and >150 minutes moderate or vigorous physical activity (MVPA) per week were measured. Results showed that 28.8% of college students were food insecure, 34.5% had an above-50 HEI score, and 58.2% achieve adequate physical activity per week. In comparison, adults in the general population have lower rates of food insecurity (22.4%), higher rates HEI above 50 (42.2%), and lower rates of adequate physical activity (35.6%), with p<0.05 for all comparisons. These findings suggest that interventions to improve students’ food access and diet quality may be important to implement by institutions of higher education.en-USCollege HealthCollege NutritionCollege Food SecurityCollege Physical ActivityNHANESMeasuring Health of College Students: Food Security, Diet Quality, and Physical Activityreport