Clustering of health and oral health-compromising behaviours in army personnel in central peninsular Malaysia

Health- and oral health-compromising behaviours (HOHCBs) impact the health readiness of military personnel, resulting in decreased fitness performance, thus affecting combat readiness. This study aimed to identify the clustering patterns and number of HOHCBs in army personnel in Central Peninsular M...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Azil, Ahmad Asyraf, Yusof, Zamros Yuzadi Mohd, Marhazlinda, Jamaludin
Format: Article
Published: MDPI 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/38481/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.um.eprints.38481
record_format eprints
spelling my.um.eprints.384812023-06-26T06:53:16Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/38481/ Clustering of health and oral health-compromising behaviours in army personnel in central peninsular Malaysia Azil, Ahmad Asyraf Yusof, Zamros Yuzadi Mohd Marhazlinda, Jamaludin Practice of dentistry. Dental economics Health- and oral health-compromising behaviours (HOHCBs) impact the health readiness of military personnel, resulting in decreased fitness performance, thus affecting combat readiness. This study aimed to identify the clustering patterns and number of HOHCBs in army personnel in Central Peninsular Malaysia. Thus, a cross-sectional study using a multistage sampling technique and a validated 42-item online questionnaire was conducted to assess ten health (medical screening, physical activity, sedentary lifestyle, smoking status, alcohol consumption, substance abuse, aggressive behaviours, sleep, and road safety habits) and five oral health behaviour domains (tooth brushing, fluoridated toothpaste use, flossing, dental visits, and bruxism). Each HOHCB was dichotomised into healthy and health-compromising behaviour and analysed using hierarchical agglomerative cluster analysis (HACA). With the majority being males (92.5%), of other ranks (96.8%), and healthy (83.9%), 2435 army members of a mean age of 30.3 years (SD = 5.9) participated, with a response rate of 100%. HACA identified two clustering patterns: (i) `high-risk behaviours' (30 HOHCBs) and (ii) `most common risk behaviours' (12 HOHCBs) with a mean clustering number of 14.1 (SD = 4.1). In conclusion, army personnel in Central Peninsular Malaysia displayed 2 broad HOHCB clustering patterns, `high-risk' and `most common risk', with an average of 14 HOHCB clusters per person. MDPI 2023-03 Article PeerReviewed Azil, Ahmad Asyraf and Yusof, Zamros Yuzadi Mohd and Marhazlinda, Jamaludin (2023) Clustering of health and oral health-compromising behaviours in army personnel in central peninsular Malaysia. Healthcare, 11 (5). ISSN 2227-9032, DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11050640 <https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11050640>. 10.3390/healthcare11050640
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 Practice of dentistry. Dental economics
spellingShingle Practice of dentistry. Dental economics
Azil, Ahmad Asyraf
Yusof, Zamros Yuzadi Mohd
Marhazlinda, Jamaludin
Clustering of health and oral health-compromising behaviours in army personnel in central peninsular Malaysia
description Health- and oral health-compromising behaviours (HOHCBs) impact the health readiness of military personnel, resulting in decreased fitness performance, thus affecting combat readiness. This study aimed to identify the clustering patterns and number of HOHCBs in army personnel in Central Peninsular Malaysia. Thus, a cross-sectional study using a multistage sampling technique and a validated 42-item online questionnaire was conducted to assess ten health (medical screening, physical activity, sedentary lifestyle, smoking status, alcohol consumption, substance abuse, aggressive behaviours, sleep, and road safety habits) and five oral health behaviour domains (tooth brushing, fluoridated toothpaste use, flossing, dental visits, and bruxism). Each HOHCB was dichotomised into healthy and health-compromising behaviour and analysed using hierarchical agglomerative cluster analysis (HACA). With the majority being males (92.5%), of other ranks (96.8%), and healthy (83.9%), 2435 army members of a mean age of 30.3 years (SD = 5.9) participated, with a response rate of 100%. HACA identified two clustering patterns: (i) `high-risk behaviours' (30 HOHCBs) and (ii) `most common risk behaviours' (12 HOHCBs) with a mean clustering number of 14.1 (SD = 4.1). In conclusion, army personnel in Central Peninsular Malaysia displayed 2 broad HOHCB clustering patterns, `high-risk' and `most common risk', with an average of 14 HOHCB clusters per person.
format Article
author Azil, Ahmad Asyraf
Yusof, Zamros Yuzadi Mohd
Marhazlinda, Jamaludin
author_facet Azil, Ahmad Asyraf
Yusof, Zamros Yuzadi Mohd
Marhazlinda, Jamaludin
author_sort Azil, Ahmad Asyraf
title Clustering of health and oral health-compromising behaviours in army personnel in central peninsular Malaysia
title_short Clustering of health and oral health-compromising behaviours in army personnel in central peninsular Malaysia
title_full Clustering of health and oral health-compromising behaviours in army personnel in central peninsular Malaysia
title_fullStr Clustering of health and oral health-compromising behaviours in army personnel in central peninsular Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Clustering of health and oral health-compromising behaviours in army personnel in central peninsular Malaysia
title_sort clustering of health and oral health-compromising behaviours in army personnel in central peninsular malaysia
publisher MDPI
publishDate 2023
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/38481/
_version_ 1769842724223057920
score 13.211869