Abstract

With the aim to explore cultural differences in stress-related psychological, nutrition, physical activity, and oral health factors between Spanish and Latin American professors, we analysed stress-related factors in 598 professors (39.9% male, 60.1% female, 41.3 ± 9.8 years) by a collection of questionnaires, which involved psychological, nutritional, physical activity and oral health items. Results showed how Spanish professors presented significantly (p ≤ 0.05) higher scores than Latin American professors in perceived stress (Spanish: 21.40 ± 4.32 vs. Latin American: 20.36 ± 4.31), teaching stress (Spanish: 6.59 ± 2.28 vs. Latin American: 6.00 ± 2.99) and neuroticism (Spanish: 5.40 ± 2.10 vs. Latin American: 4.58 ± 1.72). Spanish professors also showed healthier nutritional and physical activity habits than their Latin American counterparts, presenting higher consumption of milk products and a higher numbers of meals per day, greater weekly meat and fish consumption and higher weekly resistance training, as well as less eating between hours and snacking consumption. Nevertheless, Spanish professors brushed their teeth less and showed a higher smoking habit than Latin American professors. We concluded that there were cultural differences between Spanish and Latin American professors. In the present research, Spanish professors showed significantly higher burnout levels, teaching stress, perceived stress, and neuroticism than Latin American professors, and several differences were also found around health behaviours. These differences in perceived stress, teaching stress and burnout syndrome may be due to the habituation process of Latin American professors, and probably are associated with a higher stressful and demanding socio-cultural context.

Highlights

  • Stress response is one of the older mechanisms that human beings developed to be able to adapt to the demands of changing and highly eliciting contexts [1]

  • Several authors have connected repeated stress exposition with different health problems which may lead in psychopathologies such as anxiety, depression and posttraumatic stress disorder [6,7,8]

  • The academic university scenario has been found to be a stressful context for both students [10,11,12,13,14,15] and professors [16], since both presented a hyperactivation of the autonomous sympathetic nervous system

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Summary

Introduction

Stress response is one of the older mechanisms that human beings developed to be able to adapt to the demands of changing and highly eliciting contexts [1]. Stressors could be either external (from the context/environment, psychological or social situations) or internal (illness, regeneration, recovery and return to homeostasis processes). Stress produces no specific response, which triggers neurologic, endocrinologic, psychological, cognitive and behavioural modifications, mostly regulated by the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal gland (HPA) axis and the autonomous nervous system by a negative feedback [1,2] whose aim is the maintenance of organic homeostasis through metabolic, cardiovascular, Nutrients 2020, 12, 3644; doi:10.3390/nu12123644 www.mdpi.com/journal/nutrients. In work environments the burnout syndrome is considered as a result of uncontrolled stress [9]. The educational context was previously considered as a focus of sustained stress for teachers, since the burnout syndrome was a common pathology of this professional collective [17]. They may suffer frequent headaches, gastrointestinal disorders, as well as modification in appetite and food ingestion patterns

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