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The life and health challenges of young Malaysian couples: results from a stakeholder consensus and engagement study to support non-communicable disease prevention

The life and health challenges of young Malaysian couples: results from a stakeholder consensus and engagement study to support non-communicable disease prevention
The life and health challenges of young Malaysian couples: results from a stakeholder consensus and engagement study to support non-communicable disease prevention
BACKGROUND: Malaysia faces burgeoning obesity and diabetes epidemics with a 250% and 88% increase respectively between 1996 and 2006. Identifying the health challenges of young adults in Malaysia, who constitute 27.5 % of the population, is critical for NCD prevention. The aim of the study was two-fold: (1) to achieve consensus amongst stakeholders on the most important challenge impacting the health of young adults, and (2) to engage with stakeholders to formulate a NCD prevention framework.

METHODS: The Delphi Technique was utilised to achieve group consensus around the most important life and health challenges that young adults face in Malaysia. Subsequently, the results of the consensus component were shared with the stakeholders in an engagement workshop to obtain input on a NCD prevention framework.

RESULTS: We found that life stress was a significant concern. It would seem that the apathy towards pursuing or maintaining a healthy lifestyle among young adults may be significantly influenced by the broader distal determinant of life stress. The high cost of living is suggested to be the main push factor for young working adults towards attaining better financial security to improve their livelihood. In turn, this leads to a more stressful lifestyle with less time to focus on healthier lifestyle choices.

CONCLUSIONS: The findings highlight a pivotal barrier to healthier lifestyles. By assisting young adults to cope with daily living coupled with realistic opportunities to make healthier dietary choices, be more active, and less sedentary could assist in the development of NCD health promotion strategies
1471-2458
S6
Norris, S.
8c711796-0237-4b3d-9cf1-a5bce12c995d
Anuar, H.
2e3ee316-9a8d-4b69-a493-f3af7eef3bad
Matzen, P.
a7ecb72d-6f1d-4043-9132-d2e232bf3d0e
Cheah, J.
fc8406ec-255c-47aa-8567-f69eb4ef4d82
Jensen, B.
7f170757-a0b6-403b-8a3e-0c70db8652f0
Hanson, Mark A.
1952fad1-abc7-4284-a0bc-a7eb31f70a3f
Norris, S.
8c711796-0237-4b3d-9cf1-a5bce12c995d
Anuar, H.
2e3ee316-9a8d-4b69-a493-f3af7eef3bad
Matzen, P.
a7ecb72d-6f1d-4043-9132-d2e232bf3d0e
Cheah, J.
fc8406ec-255c-47aa-8567-f69eb4ef4d82
Jensen, B.
7f170757-a0b6-403b-8a3e-0c70db8652f0
Hanson, Mark A.
1952fad1-abc7-4284-a0bc-a7eb31f70a3f

Norris, S., Anuar, H., Matzen, P., Cheah, J., Jensen, B. and Hanson, Mark A. (2014) The life and health challenges of young Malaysian couples: results from a stakeholder consensus and engagement study to support non-communicable disease prevention. BMC Public Health, 14 (S2), supplement Responsive Health Systems: Working with the Community on Control of Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs), S6. (doi:10.1186/1471-2458-14-S2-S6). (PMID:25080995)

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Malaysia faces burgeoning obesity and diabetes epidemics with a 250% and 88% increase respectively between 1996 and 2006. Identifying the health challenges of young adults in Malaysia, who constitute 27.5 % of the population, is critical for NCD prevention. The aim of the study was two-fold: (1) to achieve consensus amongst stakeholders on the most important challenge impacting the health of young adults, and (2) to engage with stakeholders to formulate a NCD prevention framework.

METHODS: The Delphi Technique was utilised to achieve group consensus around the most important life and health challenges that young adults face in Malaysia. Subsequently, the results of the consensus component were shared with the stakeholders in an engagement workshop to obtain input on a NCD prevention framework.

RESULTS: We found that life stress was a significant concern. It would seem that the apathy towards pursuing or maintaining a healthy lifestyle among young adults may be significantly influenced by the broader distal determinant of life stress. The high cost of living is suggested to be the main push factor for young working adults towards attaining better financial security to improve their livelihood. In turn, this leads to a more stressful lifestyle with less time to focus on healthier lifestyle choices.

CONCLUSIONS: The findings highlight a pivotal barrier to healthier lifestyles. By assisting young adults to cope with daily living coupled with realistic opportunities to make healthier dietary choices, be more active, and less sedentary could assist in the development of NCD health promotion strategies

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Published date: June 2014
Organisations: Human Development & Health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 367315
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/367315
ISSN: 1471-2458
PURE UUID: 1402880f-549b-4991-b33e-09de6880061e
ORCID for Mark A. Hanson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6907-613X

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Date deposited: 26 Aug 2014 10:53
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:07

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Contributors

Author: S. Norris
Author: H. Anuar
Author: P. Matzen
Author: J. Cheah
Author: B. Jensen
Author: Mark A. Hanson ORCID iD

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