Unveiling night eating syndrome: how it connects to mental health, insomnia, and quality of life in university studentsβ€”a cross-sectional study

Oct 17, 2025Journal of eating disorders

Night eating syndrome linked to mental health, sleep problems, and quality of life in university students

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Abstract

58.2% of university students in Jordan were found to have (NES).

  • Women are 1.94 times more likely to have NES than men.
  • Overweight individuals have approximately 3.2 times higher odds of NES compared to obese individuals.
  • Healthy weight individuals (BMI 18.5-24.9 kg/m) have an 87% reduced likelihood of NES compared to obese individuals.
  • Current smokers are about 2.8 times more likely to have NES than never smokers.
  • Former smokers have approximately 13 times higher odds of developing NES compared to never smokers.

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Key numbers

58.2%
Prevalence of
Percentage of university students diagnosed with .
1.94Γ—
Increased Odds for Women
Odds ratio comparing women vs. men.
3.21Γ—
Increased Odds for Overweight Individuals
Odds ratio comparing overweight vs. obese individuals.

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