Awareness and perceived barriers in practicing healthy living to prevent hypertension among young adults in Malaysia

Objective: To investigate the knowledge, attitude, and practice levels and perceived barriers towards healthy living to prevent hypertension among young adults in Malaysia. Methods: Adults aged 18-25 years reside in Malaysia were recruited via convenience sampling. Sociodemographic characteristics,...

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Published in:Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Medicine
Main Author: Siew-Keah L.; Hann K.W.; Hoe S.K.; En L.R.; Chin L.B.; Chan M.M.S.; Kang T.Z.; Ang-Lim C.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2022
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85146603740&doi=10.4103%2f1995-7645.364001&partnerID=40&md5=86e8cae3fd657fc922fd63dab36d6847
id 2-s2.0-85146603740
spelling 2-s2.0-85146603740
Siew-Keah L.; Hann K.W.; Hoe S.K.; En L.R.; Chin L.B.; Chan M.M.S.; Kang T.Z.; Ang-Lim C.
Awareness and perceived barriers in practicing healthy living to prevent hypertension among young adults in Malaysia
2022
Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Medicine
15
12
10.4103/1995-7645.364001
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85146603740&doi=10.4103%2f1995-7645.364001&partnerID=40&md5=86e8cae3fd657fc922fd63dab36d6847
Objective: To investigate the knowledge, attitude, and practice levels and perceived barriers towards healthy living to prevent hypertension among young adults in Malaysia. Methods: Adults aged 18-25 years reside in Malaysia were recruited via convenience sampling. Sociodemographic characteristics, medical knowledge on hypertension (K1), knowledge (K), attitude (A), practice (P) and perceived barriers in practising healthy living to prevent hypertension were assessed. Average scores were categorised into good (80%-100%), upper-moderate (70%-79%), lower-moderate (60%-69%) and poor (<60%). Multivariate analysis was performed to test the difference and relationship of variables. Pearson correlation test was used to test the association of two continuous variables. Results: A total of 1 218 respondents participated in this survey. The mean score of K1 was 54.1%, while the knowledge, attitude, and practice towards healthy living were 82.7%, 78.2%and 68.5% respectively. The prevalence of high salt intake, high fat intakes, low fibre intake, sedentary lifestyle and lack of annual health screening was 83.2%, 81.4%, 70.3%, and 73.2%, respectively. Abnormal BMI was associated with low P scores, while lower socio-economic status, unawareness of self-blood pressure reading and those without family history of hypertension were associated with lower scores in K1, K, A, and P. K1, K, A and P are significantly inter-related. The main perceived barriers included self-proclaimed good fit status, frequent consumption of out-of-home food, and addiction to high salt/fat food. Conclusions: The national strategies for health management should be prioritized in reducing salt and fat, promoting annual health screening, physical activities and fibre intake in this age group. © 2022 Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Medicine Produced by Wolters Kluwer-Medknow.
Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
19957645
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Siew-Keah L.; Hann K.W.; Hoe S.K.; En L.R.; Chin L.B.; Chan M.M.S.; Kang T.Z.; Ang-Lim C.
spellingShingle Siew-Keah L.; Hann K.W.; Hoe S.K.; En L.R.; Chin L.B.; Chan M.M.S.; Kang T.Z.; Ang-Lim C.
Awareness and perceived barriers in practicing healthy living to prevent hypertension among young adults in Malaysia
author_facet Siew-Keah L.; Hann K.W.; Hoe S.K.; En L.R.; Chin L.B.; Chan M.M.S.; Kang T.Z.; Ang-Lim C.
author_sort Siew-Keah L.; Hann K.W.; Hoe S.K.; En L.R.; Chin L.B.; Chan M.M.S.; Kang T.Z.; Ang-Lim C.
title Awareness and perceived barriers in practicing healthy living to prevent hypertension among young adults in Malaysia
title_short Awareness and perceived barriers in practicing healthy living to prevent hypertension among young adults in Malaysia
title_full Awareness and perceived barriers in practicing healthy living to prevent hypertension among young adults in Malaysia
title_fullStr Awareness and perceived barriers in practicing healthy living to prevent hypertension among young adults in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Awareness and perceived barriers in practicing healthy living to prevent hypertension among young adults in Malaysia
title_sort Awareness and perceived barriers in practicing healthy living to prevent hypertension among young adults in Malaysia
publishDate 2022
container_title Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Medicine
container_volume 15
container_issue 12
doi_str_mv 10.4103/1995-7645.364001
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85146603740&doi=10.4103%2f1995-7645.364001&partnerID=40&md5=86e8cae3fd657fc922fd63dab36d6847
description Objective: To investigate the knowledge, attitude, and practice levels and perceived barriers towards healthy living to prevent hypertension among young adults in Malaysia. Methods: Adults aged 18-25 years reside in Malaysia were recruited via convenience sampling. Sociodemographic characteristics, medical knowledge on hypertension (K1), knowledge (K), attitude (A), practice (P) and perceived barriers in practising healthy living to prevent hypertension were assessed. Average scores were categorised into good (80%-100%), upper-moderate (70%-79%), lower-moderate (60%-69%) and poor (<60%). Multivariate analysis was performed to test the difference and relationship of variables. Pearson correlation test was used to test the association of two continuous variables. Results: A total of 1 218 respondents participated in this survey. The mean score of K1 was 54.1%, while the knowledge, attitude, and practice towards healthy living were 82.7%, 78.2%and 68.5% respectively. The prevalence of high salt intake, high fat intakes, low fibre intake, sedentary lifestyle and lack of annual health screening was 83.2%, 81.4%, 70.3%, and 73.2%, respectively. Abnormal BMI was associated with low P scores, while lower socio-economic status, unawareness of self-blood pressure reading and those without family history of hypertension were associated with lower scores in K1, K, A, and P. K1, K, A and P are significantly inter-related. The main perceived barriers included self-proclaimed good fit status, frequent consumption of out-of-home food, and addiction to high salt/fat food. Conclusions: The national strategies for health management should be prioritized in reducing salt and fat, promoting annual health screening, physical activities and fibre intake in this age group. © 2022 Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Medicine Produced by Wolters Kluwer-Medknow.
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
issn 19957645
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
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