Muslim consumers’ behaviour towards halal nutraceutical products in Malaysia

Nutraceutical is defined as a food, or parts of a food, that provide medical or health benefits, including disease prevention and treatment. Although the primary source of nutraceutical products is plant-based, not all nutraceutical products can be categorized as halal. Many ingredients are involved...

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Main Authors: Siti Nurunnajwa, S., Elistina, A.B., Syuhaily, O., Nuradli Ridzwan Shah, M.D.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Rynnye Lyan Resources 2024
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/114235/1/114235.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/114235/
https://www.myfoodresearch.com/uploads/8/4/8/5/84855864/_47__fr-2022-634_siti_nurunnajwa.pdf
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spelling my.upm.eprints.1142352025-01-08T06:26:16Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/114235/ Muslim consumers’ behaviour towards halal nutraceutical products in Malaysia Siti Nurunnajwa, S. Elistina, A.B. Syuhaily, O. Nuradli Ridzwan Shah, M.D. Nutraceutical is defined as a food, or parts of a food, that provide medical or health benefits, including disease prevention and treatment. Although the primary source of nutraceutical products is plant-based, not all nutraceutical products can be categorized as halal. Many ingredients are involved in food processing and used as flavours, stabilizers, or colouring agents. In addition, some additives may be derived from non-halal sources, whether from pork, blood, non-slaughtered animals, genetically modified, or extracted with ethanol. Therefore, there is a need to identify the factors influencing Muslims’ consumer behaviour towards halal nutraceutical products to improve their awareness of them in Malaysia. For this reason, the present study has been developed to examine the factors that affect Muslim behaviour in purchasing halal nutraceutical products. This study employed a quantitative approach, with a total of 400 Muslim consumers in Malaysia participating and selected through multi-stage random sampling. Multiple regression analysis was used to determine whether Islamic values, religiosity, the maqasid shariah principle, and trust in government influence consumer behaviour toward halal nutraceutical products. The result indicated that all four factors significantly affect the consumers’ behaviour, where trust in the government was the most substantial predictive factor. This study was expected to improve halal awareness among Muslim consumers while encouraging the government to strengthen the Halal industry to protect the welfare of Muslim consumers in Malaysia. Rynnye Lyan Resources 2024-06 Article PeerReviewed text en cc_by_4 http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/114235/1/114235.pdf Siti Nurunnajwa, S. and Elistina, A.B. and Syuhaily, O. and Nuradli Ridzwan Shah, M.D. (2024) Muslim consumers’ behaviour towards halal nutraceutical products in Malaysia. Food Research, 8 (3). pp. 402-407. ISSN eISSN: 2550-2166 https://www.myfoodresearch.com/uploads/8/4/8/5/84855864/_47__fr-2022-634_siti_nurunnajwa.pdf 10.26656/fr.2017.8(3).634
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
description Nutraceutical is defined as a food, or parts of a food, that provide medical or health benefits, including disease prevention and treatment. Although the primary source of nutraceutical products is plant-based, not all nutraceutical products can be categorized as halal. Many ingredients are involved in food processing and used as flavours, stabilizers, or colouring agents. In addition, some additives may be derived from non-halal sources, whether from pork, blood, non-slaughtered animals, genetically modified, or extracted with ethanol. Therefore, there is a need to identify the factors influencing Muslims’ consumer behaviour towards halal nutraceutical products to improve their awareness of them in Malaysia. For this reason, the present study has been developed to examine the factors that affect Muslim behaviour in purchasing halal nutraceutical products. This study employed a quantitative approach, with a total of 400 Muslim consumers in Malaysia participating and selected through multi-stage random sampling. Multiple regression analysis was used to determine whether Islamic values, religiosity, the maqasid shariah principle, and trust in government influence consumer behaviour toward halal nutraceutical products. The result indicated that all four factors significantly affect the consumers’ behaviour, where trust in the government was the most substantial predictive factor. This study was expected to improve halal awareness among Muslim consumers while encouraging the government to strengthen the Halal industry to protect the welfare of Muslim consumers in Malaysia.
format Article
author Siti Nurunnajwa, S.
Elistina, A.B.
Syuhaily, O.
Nuradli Ridzwan Shah, M.D.
spellingShingle Siti Nurunnajwa, S.
Elistina, A.B.
Syuhaily, O.
Nuradli Ridzwan Shah, M.D.
Muslim consumers’ behaviour towards halal nutraceutical products in Malaysia
author_facet Siti Nurunnajwa, S.
Elistina, A.B.
Syuhaily, O.
Nuradli Ridzwan Shah, M.D.
author_sort Siti Nurunnajwa, S.
title Muslim consumers’ behaviour towards halal nutraceutical products in Malaysia
title_short Muslim consumers’ behaviour towards halal nutraceutical products in Malaysia
title_full Muslim consumers’ behaviour towards halal nutraceutical products in Malaysia
title_fullStr Muslim consumers’ behaviour towards halal nutraceutical products in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Muslim consumers’ behaviour towards halal nutraceutical products in Malaysia
title_sort muslim consumers’ behaviour towards halal nutraceutical products in malaysia
publisher Rynnye Lyan Resources
publishDate 2024
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/114235/1/114235.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/114235/
https://www.myfoodresearch.com/uploads/8/4/8/5/84855864/_47__fr-2022-634_siti_nurunnajwa.pdf
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score 13.239859