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Journal : Science Midwifery

Nurse Caring Experience In Providing Nursing Services Among Covid-19 Patients In The Private Hospital Pekanbaru: A Phenomenological Study Mersi Ekaputri; Arya Ramadia; Sumandar Sumandar
Science Midwifery Vol 10 No 1, October (2021): Science Midwifery
Publisher : Institute of Computer Science (IOCS)

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Abstract

The spread of COVID-19 is still continuing very fast. The COVID-19 outbreak is a global problem that has an impact on various life settings and is a challenge for nurses in providing professional nursing care with the risk of contracting and even becoming a victim of COVID-19. The study aims to explore in depth the caring experiences of nurses in providing nursing services to COVID-19 patients in hospital. The research design is used descriptive phenomenology. Participants were 12 nurse, who were selected by purposive sampling technique. The Data be in the form of in-depth interviews and field notes. Furthermore, it is analyzed verbatim and using Colaizzi's approach. The results of the study found six themes, which is nurse anxiety, support system, professional responsibility, workload, refusal of information by patient and patient's family, risk of infection. The themes that emerge from the results of the study can serve as a reference for health workers, especially in the managerial field in taking policies regarding health services, especially nursing services by COVID-19 nurses in order to produce good and safe nursing services for both patients and nurses as nursing service providers.
Knowledge of Sexual and Reproductive Health Among High School Students, Batam, Indonesia Angga Putri; Datuk Munirah; Tukimim Sansuwito; Risqi Utami; Arya Ramadia
Science Midwifery Vol 10 No 5 (2022): December: Science Midwifery
Publisher : Institute of Computer Science (IOCS)

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.35335/midwifery.v10i5.1008

Abstract

This study aims to describe sexual knowledge and reproductive health among school-going adolescents and compare levels of knowledge between males and females. A cross-sectional study was conducted on 387 high school adolescents using a self-validated questionnaire. Adolescents' knowledge level is high at 39.14%, the moderate category is 50.55%, and low-level knowledge is 10.31%. An independent t-test revealed that the average knowledge score of men and women showed no significant difference, with a mean score of 12.42 for males and 12.37 for females. The majority of adolescents discussing sexual matters with friends is 43.41%, 98.71% of adolescents ever heard about contraception, 89.66% know condoms as contraception, and 24.55% do not know how to use them. As many as 51.68% of adolescents only know that HIV/AIDS is a sexually transmitted disease. Lack of knowledge of important aspects of sexual and reproductive health insurance and the need to strengthen sexual and reproductive health education.