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You are here: Home / Preventive Healthcare / The Hidden Health Risks STUDENTS Ignore During Exam Prep!

The Hidden Health Risks STUDENTS Ignore During Exam Prep!

December 5, 2025 by Prashanth Cheruku, M.Tech Leave a Comment

Every year, millions of students attempt the world’s toughest exams—medical, engineering, civil services, law, science olympiads, and global standardized tests. Yet the biggest threat they face isn’t the difficulty of the exam. It’s the silent erosion of their physical and mental health during preparation.

Long study hours, stress overload, poor sleep, energy-dense foods, and inactivity weaken immunity, cognition, and emotional balance. This guide outlines simple, science-backed preventive healthcare strategies to help students protect their health while maximizing academic performance.


1. Sleep: The Most Powerful Exam Strategy

Sleep is not optional—it is neurological maintenance. Research shows that memory consolidation, problem-solving ability, and focus significantly drop with sleep restriction. Students preparing for competitive exams often sleep less than 6 hours, which increases cortisol, reduces attention span, and impairs recall.

Prevention plan:

  • Aim for 7–9 hours of sleep
  • Avoid caffeine after 4 PM
  • Keep screens off 60 minutes before bed
  • Try sleep-support tools like Philips Somneo, Hatch Restore, or Flux screen filter apps

2. Nutrition for Brain Performance and Immunity

Competitive exam preparation often leads to skipped meals or junk-food spikes. A study in Nutrients notes that stable blood glucose enhances sustained attention, while nutrient deficiencies impair cognition.

What to prioritize:

  • Whole grains for steady energy
  • Omega-3-rich foods (walnuts, chia, fish)
  • Fruits, vegetables, and nuts for micronutrients
  • Hydration: 1.5–2.5 liters/day

Convenient commercial options:

  • Huel Ready-to-Drink, Ensure Original, Boost High Protein, RX Bars

These maintain nutrition during long study stretches.

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3. Movement: Preventing Physical Decline

Sitting 10–14 hours a day increases risk of back pain, eye strain, and metabolic slowdown. According to WHO, physical inactivity is a leading contributor to disease and poor mental health.

Preventive strategies:

  • 5-minute walk every hour
  • Stretching routine twice per day
  • Eye rest every 20 minutes (20-20-20 rule)
  • Ergonomic furniture (e.g., Herman Miller Sayl, FlexiSpot Standing Desk)

About Us

Prashanth Reddy Cheruku

Welcome!
I created this platform with a mission: to educate people worldwide about Food Science, Nutrition & Preventive Healthcare. Our ultimate goal is to enhance both lifespan and healthspan—not just for people, but for PETS too!
About Me
I am a qualified Food Engineer & Sports Nutritionist with over 13 years of research & content creation experience. My academic background includes:
🎓 Master of Technology in Food Process Engineering
📍 Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Kharagpur

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4. Stress & Mental Health Protection

Students face chronic high stress due to competition, comparison, and uncertainty. Continuous stress increases cortisol, impairs learning, and weakens immunity.

Science-based strategies include:

  • Mindfulness practices shown to reduce anxiety
  • Deep breathing techniques to activate the parasympathetic system
  • Digital therapeutic tools such as Headspace, Calm, Wysa, or Insight Timer
  • Scheduled rest days to prevent burnout

Professional help should be sought for persistent anxiety, sleep disturbances, or depressive symptoms.


5. Immune System Protection

Intense preparation often suppresses immunity. Research confirms that academic stress increases susceptibility to infections.

Prevention checklist:

  • Consume Vitamin C, D, and Zinc through natural foods
  • Maintain sleep quality
  • Wash hands frequently
  • Keep adequate indoor ventilation
  • Use air purifiers like Xiaomi Mi Air Purifier when necessary

6. Cognitive Health & Productivity

Brain performance is a health outcome. Evidence shows that planned breaks improve productivity and long-term retention.

High-performance habits:

  • Pomodoro cycles: 25 min study + 5 min break
  • Weekly review sessions
  • Blocking distractions using apps like Forest, Notion, Todoist

Further Reading

https://www.nature.com/articles/s44159-023-00262-0

https://www.nature.com/articles/nrn2762

https://hms.harvard.edu/news-events/publications-archive/brain/sugar-brain

https://www.who.int/news/item/26-06-2024-nearly-1.8-billion-adults-at-risk-of-disease-from-not-doing-enough-physical-activity

https://www.mdpi.com/2254-9625/15/11/231

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11949974

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