Exploring the link between BMI, perceived neighbourhood environment and health behaviours in Malaysia

Obesity in Malaysia has become increasingly worrying. Besides health behaviours, perceived food and built environments have also been identified as influential perceived environmental factors, health behaviours and the Body Mass Index (BMI). A conceptual model that reflects the interactions between...

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Main Authors: Majid, M.R., Hashim Lim, Noor Hashimah, Zaman, M., Ruslik, N.
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出版: Universiti Malaysia Terengganu 2021
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spelling my.um.eprints.356362023-10-20T03:09:56Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/35636/ Exploring the link between BMI, perceived neighbourhood environment and health behaviours in Malaysia Majid, M.R. Hashim Lim, Noor Hashimah Zaman, M. Ruslik, N. NA Architecture Obesity in Malaysia has become increasingly worrying. Besides health behaviours, perceived food and built environments have also been identified as influential perceived environmental factors, health behaviours and the Body Mass Index (BMI). A conceptual model that reflects the interactions between Perceived Neighbourhood Food (PNFE), Perceived Neighbourhood Built Environment (PNBE), Diet Quality Activity (PA) and BMI was developed. Adults (n= 256) were approached to complete the questionnaires used in this study. Exploratory and Confirmatory Factor Analyses were used to validate the constructs and produce the measurement model, while Structural Equation Modelling was used to compute the causal model. The proposed perceived neighbourhood environment, health behaviours and BMI causal model was a fit. PNFE (β=.192, p=.032), DQ (β= -.194, p=.004) and PA (β= -.189, p=.010) were found to have significant direct effects on BMI, but not PNBE (β= -.117, p=.143). This result also indicates that PNFE partially mediates the relationship between DQ and BMI, mediate the relationship between PNBE and BMI. This suggests that the food environment is a highly significant predictor of BMI and should be explored more The model illustrates the implications that urban planning has on health health outcomes. © Penerbit UMT Universiti Malaysia Terengganu 2021 Article PeerReviewed Majid, M.R. and Hashim Lim, Noor Hashimah and Zaman, M. and Ruslik, N. (2021) Exploring the link between BMI, perceived neighbourhood environment and health behaviours in Malaysia. Journal of Sustainability Science and Management, 16 (7). pp. 190-208. ISSN 1823-8556, DOI https://doi.org/10.46754/jssm.2021.10.015 <https://doi.org/10.46754/jssm.2021.10.015>. 10.46754/jssm.2021.10.015
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic NA Architecture
spellingShingle NA Architecture
Majid, M.R.
Hashim Lim, Noor Hashimah
Zaman, M.
Ruslik, N.
Exploring the link between BMI, perceived neighbourhood environment and health behaviours in Malaysia
description Obesity in Malaysia has become increasingly worrying. Besides health behaviours, perceived food and built environments have also been identified as influential perceived environmental factors, health behaviours and the Body Mass Index (BMI). A conceptual model that reflects the interactions between Perceived Neighbourhood Food (PNFE), Perceived Neighbourhood Built Environment (PNBE), Diet Quality Activity (PA) and BMI was developed. Adults (n= 256) were approached to complete the questionnaires used in this study. Exploratory and Confirmatory Factor Analyses were used to validate the constructs and produce the measurement model, while Structural Equation Modelling was used to compute the causal model. The proposed perceived neighbourhood environment, health behaviours and BMI causal model was a fit. PNFE (β=.192, p=.032), DQ (β= -.194, p=.004) and PA (β= -.189, p=.010) were found to have significant direct effects on BMI, but not PNBE (β= -.117, p=.143). This result also indicates that PNFE partially mediates the relationship between DQ and BMI, mediate the relationship between PNBE and BMI. This suggests that the food environment is a highly significant predictor of BMI and should be explored more The model illustrates the implications that urban planning has on health health outcomes. © Penerbit UMT
format Article
author Majid, M.R.
Hashim Lim, Noor Hashimah
Zaman, M.
Ruslik, N.
author_facet Majid, M.R.
Hashim Lim, Noor Hashimah
Zaman, M.
Ruslik, N.
author_sort Majid, M.R.
title Exploring the link between BMI, perceived neighbourhood environment and health behaviours in Malaysia
title_short Exploring the link between BMI, perceived neighbourhood environment and health behaviours in Malaysia
title_full Exploring the link between BMI, perceived neighbourhood environment and health behaviours in Malaysia
title_fullStr Exploring the link between BMI, perceived neighbourhood environment and health behaviours in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the link between BMI, perceived neighbourhood environment and health behaviours in Malaysia
title_sort exploring the link between bmi, perceived neighbourhood environment and health behaviours in malaysia
publisher Universiti Malaysia Terengganu
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/35636/
_version_ 1781704489597665280
score 13.252575