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Journal : Journal Of Bionursing

Adolescents’ Knowledge, Attitudes, and Non-Pharmacology Practice of Treating Dysmenorrhea Latifah, Lutfatul; Darajati, Nabila Mentari; Kartikasari, Aprilia
Journal of Bionursing Vol 6 No 2 (2024): Journal of Bionursing
Publisher : Fakultas Ilmu-ilmu Kesehatan Universitas Jenderal Soedirman

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.20884/1.job.2024.6.2.13156

Abstract

Background: Dysmenorrhea is a disorder of abdominal pain often experienced by adolescents during menstruation. This often interferes with daily activities, so it requires effective treatment, including non-pharmacology techniques. However, many adolescents still do not know how to treat dysmenorrhea. Aim: This study aims to determine the relationship between the knowledge and attitudes of adolescents toward non-pharmacology practices for treating dysmenorrhea. Method: The method used in this research are quantitative with a cross-sectional design. The sampling technique used consecutive sampling with a total sample of 106 respondents. Test analysis in this research using the Chi-Square test. Results: The result showed that knowledge in the medium category with 52 people (14.2%), attitude in the negative category with 59 people (55.7%), and adolescents do not handle practice with 81 people (76.4%). The results of the Chi-Square test between variables showed the adolescents’ knowledge with a p-value = 0.230 (p > 0.05) and adolescents’ attitudes with a p-value = 0.390 (p > 0. 05) towards non-pharmacology practices in treating dysmenorrhea. Conclusion: There is no relationship between adolescents’ knowledge and attitudes with the non-pharmacology practice of treating dysmenorrhea.
Studi Kasus: Pengaruh Kompres Jahe terhadap Penurunan Intensitas Nyeri Punggung Bawah pada Ibu Hamil Trimester III Puspayani, Nadya Elma; Kartikasari, Aprilia; Purnamasari, Meivita Dewi
Journal of Bionursing Vol 7 No 1 (2025): Journal of Bionursing
Publisher : Fakultas Ilmu-ilmu Kesehatan Universitas Jenderal Soedirman

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.20884/1.job.2025.7.1.15410

Abstract

Background. Lower back pain in pregnant women is one of the most-commonly-reported complaints with the prevalence varying from 50% to 80% of pregnant women. However, about 80% of pregnant women who experience low back pain do not make any effort to overcome the symptoms. This case study aims to determine the effect of ginger compress on the intensity of low back pain in third-trimester pregnant women. Methods. Implementation of Evidence-Based Nursing (EBN) refers to PICO with a search for articles from 2019-2023 using Google Scholar. 149 articles were collected with the result that ginger compress is an intervention that can be performed to overcome the problem. The compress was impelemented on 2 patients as an intervention group for 20 minutes for three consecutive days with a comparison of 1 patient as a control group. The evaluation was completed by measuring pain intensity every day for three days before and after the intervention. Results. There was a decrease in pain intensity from 6/10 to 1/10 and 6/10 to 1/10 in both patients in the intervention group after the intervention for three days, while in the control group, the pain intensity was 5/10 to 5/10 on day three. Conclusion. There is a decrease in pain intensity after the ginger compress intervention.