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Effect of Internet-based Intervention on Obesity among Adolescents in Kuala Lumpur: A School-based Cluster Randomised Trial 

Nawi, Azmawati Mohammed, and Farrah Ilyani Che Jamaludin

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Effect of Internet-based Intervention on Obesity among Adolescents in Kuala Lumpur: A School-based Cluster Randomised Trial 

Icon Physical InactivityPhysical InactivityIcon Unhealthy DietUnhealthy Diet

Nawi, Azmawati Mohammed, and Farrah Ilyani Che Jamaludin
The Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences 22, no. 4 (2015): 47

2015MalaysiaOnline ProgramRandomized Controlled Trial (RCT)show more button
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Toshiko Kaneda of Population Reference Bureau (PRB); Sophia Magalona and Lara Nazmi Mohd of Johns Hopkins University; and Lara Adekunle, Halle Gill, Grace Khaner, Maisy Liles, Anna Strunjas, and Isabel Vlahakis, current and former PRB interns from Georgetown University, produced the content of this website. Anneka Van Scoyoc (PRB) created the website and Raquel Wojnar (PRB) provided editorial review.

This website was funded by the AstraZeneca Young Health Programme (YHP). YHP is a disease prevention program with a unique focus on adolescents. It was founded in partnership with the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and Plan International, with local NGO partners implementing YHP programs on the ground. The YHP mission is to positively impact the health of adolescents in marginalized communities worldwide through research, advocacy, and on-the-ground programs focused on NCD prevention.

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Older adolescents’ sexual and reproductive health behaviors vary based on an individual’s geographic setting in rural or urban areas, practice of polygamy, and couple and community education levels.

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What are social norms?

Older adolescents’ use of family planning methods, especially for spacing births, depend on a number of factors, which may affect men and women differently. Examples of factors that may be associated with variations in use of family planning for spacing births are:

The following factors have been categorized into the most relevant level of the socio-ecological framework1 for simplicity, although elements of each factor may be relevant to more than one category.

Individual

  •  Religion2
  • Migrant vs resident husbands3
  • Nomadic pastoralist women vs semi-nomadic pastoralist women4

Interpersonal

  • Couple and Community Education5
  • Polygamy6
  • Couple and Community Socio-economic Status7

Community
• Post-conflict Settings8
• Geographic Setting (Urban and Rural)9