Taufiq Abdullah
Brawijaya University

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Blood Profile and Heavy Metal Levels Among Gas Station Workers in Malang Ari Prasetyadjati; Taufiq Abdullah; Munsifah Zaiyanah; Erka Wahyu Kinanda; Sabrina Analisa
Saintika Medika : Jurnal Ilmu Kesehatan dan Kedokteran Keluarga Vol. 22 No. 1 (2026): June 2026
Publisher : Universitas Muhammadiyah Malang

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.22219/sm.Vol22.SMUMM1.44254

Abstract

Fuel-station attendants are chronically exposed to lead, mercury and cadmium through inhalation of vehicle-exhaust particulates and dermal contact with fuel residues, placing them at elevated risk of cardiovascular and renal disease. Despite this recognised hazard, integrated health-surveillance data for Indonesian pump operators remain scarce. This study aimed to characterise the vascular status, haematological and biochemical profile, circulating heavy-metal concentrations and occupational safety behaviours of fuel-station workers in Malang, East Java. A descriptive cross-sectional design was employed. Twenty male pump attendants were recruited by census sampling from multiple SPBU outlets in Malang during 2025. Each participant underwent seated blood-pressure measurement, pulse oximetry and venous blood collection for quantification of lead, mercury, cadmium, renal function markers (ureum, creatinine, BUN), liver enzymes (SGOT, SGPT) and electrolytes. A structured interviewer-administered questionnaire captured sociodemographic data, smoking status and occupational safety practices. Hypertension was defined per the 2024 ESC Guidelines (≥140/90 mmHg) and metal concentrations were benchmarked against WHO occupational thresholds. Pearson correlation and SPSS 26 were used for analysis. Mean age was 26.8 ± 5.9 years. Eleven workers (55%) met the hypertension criterion (mean systolic 134.6 ± 13.9, diastolic 85.2 ± 8.8 mmHg). Blood lead averaged 30.22 ± 4.96 µg/L, exceeding the 20 µg/L occupational threshold in all 20 participants (100%). Mercury (16.32 ± 2.75 µg/L) and cadmium (3.44 ± 0.83 µg/L) mostly remained within limits. Renal and hepatic panels were largely unremarkable; however, employment duration correlated positively with blood lead (r = 0.45, p = 0.047) and with ureum (r = 0.50, p = 0.024). Only nine workers (45%) used masks or gloves routinely and six (30%) attended periodic health examinations. Universal lead-level elevation, high hypertension prevalence and poor protective-equipment compliance underscore the need for routine metal screening, cardiovascular surveillance and structured occupational-health programmes for Indonesia's fuel-station workforce.
Emergency Department Length of Stay Prior to Surgery in Head Injury Patients Suryanto Eko Agung Nugroho; Tita Hariyanti; Taufiq Abdullah; Yuddy Imowanto; Dewi Puspitasari
Saintika Medika : Jurnal Ilmu Kesehatan dan Kedokteran Keluarga Vol. 22 No. 1 (2026): June 2026
Publisher : Universitas Muhammadiyah Malang

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.22219/sm.Vol22.SMUMM1.44440

Abstract

Preoperative delays in traumatic brain injury (TBI) significantly increase morbidity and mortality. While general emergency department (ED) crowding is well-documented, specific bottlenecks bridging ED admission to neurosurgical intervention remain underexplored. This study identifies primary determinants prolonging ED length of stay (LOS) for preoperative TBI patients, offering a novel perspective on systemic versus clinical delays. This retrospective cohort study evaluated 102 head injury patients requiring emergency surgery at Dr. Saiful Anwar Hospital from January 2024 to June 2025. Mean ED LOS was 575.5 minutes (≈9.6 hours). Multivariate linear regression showed that prolonged boarding time and extended diagnostic durations were primary predictors of increased LOS (P < 0.05). Conversely, clinical factors like triage priority and staffing ratios did not significantly influence stay duration (P > 0.05). Notably, boarding time was the most dominant factor, accounting for 40.6% of LOS variance (R² = 0.406). These findings indicate that systemic operational inefficiencies in preoperative waiting and diagnostic workflows are more critical drivers of delay than patient acuity. Consequently, hospital management should prioritize optimizing inter-departmental coordination and emergency surgical pathways to improve outcomes for head injury patients.