Awareness, Risk Perception, and Behavioral Responses to Microplastics in Food Packaging: A Structural Equation Modeling Analysis of University Students in Delta State
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.4314/Keywords:
Microplastics, Food Packaging, Risk Perception, Purchasing Behavior, Structural Equation Modeling, Environmental HealthAbstract
Microplastic (MP) contamination originating from food packaging has become an emerging environmental and public health concern, yet the behavioural mechanisms through which consumers perceive and respond to this exposure pathway remain poorly understood. This study investigated undergraduate students' awareness, risk perception, purchasing behaviour, and behavioural responses to microplastics in food packaging used in campus cafeterias at Dennis Osadebay University, Asaba, Nigeria. Specifically, it examined whether risk perception mediates the relationship between awareness of microplastics and behavioural responses aimed at reducing exposure. A cross-sectional survey design was adopted, and data were collected from 430 undergraduate students using a structured questionnaire. Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) was employed to evaluate the hypothesized relationships among awareness, risk perception, purchasing behaviour, and behavioural response. The measurement model demonstrated satisfactory psychometric properties, with Cronbach's alpha ranging from 0.811 to 0.917, Composite Reliability from 0.884 to 0.931, and Average Variance Extracted from 0.511 to 0.574. The structural model exhibited excellent fit (χ²/df = 1.95, CFI = 0.940, TLI = 0.930, RMSEA = 0.047, SRMR = 0.058). Awareness significantly influenced risk perception (β = 0.562, p < 0.001), purchasing behaviour (β = 0.583, p < 0.001), and behavioural response (β = 0.298, p < 0.001). Risk perception also significantly predicted purchasing behaviour (β = 0.214, p < 0.001) and behavioural response (β = 0.317, p < 0.001). Mediation analysis revealed a significant indirect effect of awareness on behavioural response through risk perception (β = 0.213, 95% CI = 0.154–0.273), confirming partial mediation. The model explained 67.3% of the variance in behavioural response. The findings demonstrate that awareness-driven risk appraisal is a key mechanism through which students translate knowledge of microplastic contamination into exposure-reduction behaviours. The study provides empirical evidence to support environmental health education, risk communication strategies, and sustainable food-packaging policies aimed at reducing microplastic exposure among university populations.
Also available @ https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.21166785
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Copyright (c) 2006 Gabriel Chukwuka Chuks Ndinwa (Author)

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