Risk perception of COVID-19 and its associated factors among Indigenous population in Malaysia

Indigenous people have a higher risk of experiencing the bad impact of COVID-19 once they are infected. This study aimed to identify the risk perception of COVID-19 among indigenous population and its associated factors. This is a cross-sectional study with psychometric evaluation of the Malay versi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ummi Mirza Baharudin, Zaleha Md Isa, Muhammad Hilmi Mahmud, Aniza Ismail, Faiz Daud, Siti Fairuz Abu Bakar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2024
Online Access:http://journalarticle.ukm.my/24611/
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/24611/1/1909_1916%20vol14no22024_232.pdf
Description
Summary:Indigenous people have a higher risk of experiencing the bad impact of COVID-19 once they are infected. This study aimed to identify the risk perception of COVID-19 among indigenous population and its associated factors. This is a cross-sectional study with psychometric evaluation of the Malay version of the risk perception of COVID-19 questionnaire. A total of 408 indigenous adults of the Semai tribe from a remote rural area of Pahang participated in the study. For psychometric evaluation, the item internal consistency reliability was 0.87, while the item separation was 2.57. Descriptively, mean age was 36-year-old (SD ±14), woman (60.8%), mean household income RM170 (SD ± RM355), had informal education (36%) and had job (92.9%). The cross-sectional finding highlighted that those who had job (adj.OR 4, CI: 1.118-14.374), had knowledge on COVID-19 (adj.OR 3.78, CI: 1.247-11.448), higher health literacy score (adj.OR 3.3, CI:1.262-8.852), higher trust on information (adj.OR 2.95, CI:1.071-8.109) and used more frequent information on COVID-19 (adj.OR 5.77, CI:1.228-27.063) had higher risk perception on COVID-19. Those did not agree to lift the government restriction has a protective factor in the level of risk perception on COVID-19 (OR 0.34, CI:0.131-0.879). The indigenous population in Malaysia has a high-risk perception of COVID-19; however, they need assistance complying with the government policy on preventive and control measures.