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The Effect Of Prenatal Exercise Toward Clinical Outcome On Delivery Process At Permata Bunda Clinic, Serang In 2018 Putri, Nazwita Dewi; Shinta Novelia; Uswatun Khasanah; Tommy J Wowor
International Journal of Midwifery and Health Sciences Vol. 2 No. 1 (2024): IJMHS Vol 2 No 1 (2024)
Publisher : Rajaki of Tulip Medika Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.61777/ijmhs.v2i1.70

Abstract

Prenatal exercise is one of activities in services during pregnancy. Prenatal exercise result in a better pregnancy product and better delivery outcome, compared to the mothers that do not follow prenatal exercise. Delivery is a physiological process. If the mother gets no clear information and do not examine her pregnancy regularly, it becomes pathological. The research aims to determine the effect of prenatal exercise toward clinical outcome in the delivery process at Permata Bunda clinic Serang 2018. The method used in the research was quasi Experimentt control group design. The samples were 20 pregnant mothers who follow prenatal exercise at Permata Bunda Clinic Serang. The result shows that prenatal exercise affect clinical outcome during the delivery process phase I,II,III,IV which is significant among experiment group (p = 0,000). Prenatal exercise could decrease pain and accelerate labor process. Permata Bunda Clinic needs to socialize the prenatal exercise program regularly.
A Cross-Country Comparison of National Nutrition Sufficiency Programs in ASEAN Member States: An Integrated Analysis of Strategies, Outcomes, and Best Practices Putri, Nazwita Dewi
International Health Sciences Journal Vol. 3 No. 1 (2025): IHSJ Vol 3 No 1 (2025)
Publisher : Rajaki of Tulip Medika Publisher

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Abstract

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) confronts a persistent "double burden of malnutrition" (DBM), characterized by the coexistence of undernutrition—manifested as stunting and wasting—alongside a rapid increase in overweight, obesity, and diet-related non-communicable diseases (NCDs). This comprehensive analysis integrates systematic literature review findings with strategic archetype analysis to examine national nutrition sufficiency programs across ASEAN member states. Through analysis of 17 studies covering eight ASEAN countries, this study identifies four distinct strategic archetypes based on economic development and nutritional challenges: NCD-Focused High-Income Model (Singapore, Brunei Darussalam), Double-Burden Middle-Income Model (Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, Philippines), Undernutrition-Focused Lower-Income Model (Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, Timor-Leste), and Integrated Success Model (Vietnam). The analysis reveals that political commitment mechanisms fundamentally determine nutrition program success across all ASEAN contexts, operating through resource allocation, multi-sectoral coordination, policy continuity, and implementation barrier resolution. Critical success factors include strong political commitment, effective multi-sectoral coordination, robust surveillance systems, sustainable domestic financing mechanisms, and community-centered implementation strategies. Vietnam emerges as an exemplary model, achieving substantial stunting reductions by embedding nutrition interventions within broader national development frameworks, thereby securing sustainable domestic financing.
The Influence Of Health Promotion On The Knowledge Of Women Of Fertilizing Age (WUS) In The Prevention Of Cervical Cancer In The Working Area Of The PUSKESMAS Purwodi II 2017 Anggrahini, Yuriska; Novelia, Shinta; Aisyiah; Putri, Nazwita Dewi
International Health Sciences Journal Vol. 1 No. 2 (2024): IHSJ Vol 1 No 2 (2024)
Publisher : Rajaki of Tulip Medika Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.61777/ihsj.v1i2.47

Abstract

Cervical cancer is a health problem that affects countries in the world, especially developing countries. In Indonesia, cervical cancer ranks second after breast cancer. Of the 33 provinces in Indonesia, the highest number of cervical cancer sufferers is in East Java, namely 21,313 cases with a mortality rate of 10.3%. Efforts to prevent cervical cancer are carried out by early detection of cervical cancer, but this is not widely known to the wider public. One method for disseminating information about preventing cervical cancer is through health promotion. This research was conducted to determine the effect of health promotion on WUS knowledge in preventing cervical cancer. This research took the form of a quasi-experiment with a non-randomized- pretest-posttest control group design. The population in this study was 823 WUS in the working area of the Purwodadi II Community Health Center, a sample of 40 respondents was taken. The sample was separated into two groups, namely the group that was given health promotion and the group that was not given health promotion. The instrument used to measure knowledge before and after health promotion was a questionnaire. Data were analyzed using the t-test. Based on the results of data analysis, the following were obtained: (1) there was a significant difference in the knowledge of WUS before and after being given health promotion (p= 0.000). (2) there is a significant difference in WUS knowledge between the experimental group and the control group (p= 0.000). Health promotion can increase knowledge in preventing cervical cancer. This health promotion can be applied in everyday life.
The Effect of Health Promotion on The Knowledge of Reproductive Age Women in Preventing Cervical Cancer Putri, Nazwita Dewi; Shinta Novelia; Yuriska Anggrahini
International Health Sciences Journal Vol. 1 No. 3 (2024): IHSJ Vol 1 No 3 (2024)
Publisher : Rajaki of Tulip Medika Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

Cervical cancer is a health problem that affects countries in the world, especially developing countries. In Indonesia, cervical cancer ranks second after breast cancer. Of the 33 provinces in Indonesia, the highest number of cervical cancer sufferers is in East Java, 21,313 cases with a mortality rate of 10.3%. Efforts to prevent cervical cancer are carried out by early detection of cervical cancer, but this is not widely known to the wider public. One method for disseminating information about preventing cervical cancer is through health promotion. This research was conducted to determine the effect of health promotion on reproductive age women knowledge in preventing cervical cancer. This research took the form of a quasi-experiment with a non-randomized- pretest-posttest control group design. The population in this study was 823 reproductive age women in the work area of ​​the Purwodadi II Health Center, a sample of 40 respondents was taken. The sample was separated into two groups, the group that was given health promotion and the group that was not given health promotion. The instrument used to measure knowledge before and after health promotion was a questionnaire. Data were analyzed using the t-test. Based on the results of data analysis, the following were obtained: (1) there was a significant difference in the knowledge of reproductive age women before and after being given health promotion (p= 0.000). (2) there is a significant difference in of reproductive age women’s knowledge between the experimental group and the control group (p= 0.000). Health promotion can increase knowledge in preventing cervical cancer. This health promotion can be applied in everyday life.