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Hubungan Pengetahuan Pola Makan dengan Faktor Risiko Penyakit Jantung pada Remaja Febriana Rachmawati; Febri Nur Hidayah; Hendri Safitri; Tessalonika Ersaputri; Zahra Aulia Fauziah; Liss Dyah Dewi Arini
Jurnal Mahasiswa Ilmu Kesehatan Vol. 3 No. 1 (2025): Jurnal Mahasiswa Ilmu Kesehatan
Publisher : STIKes Ibnu Sina Ajibarang

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.59841/jumkes.v3i1.1992

Abstract

This research analyzes the relationship between knowledge of dietary patterns and risk factors for heart disease in adolescents, especially students. The method used was quantitative with a cross-sectional design, involving 45 teenagers. The results show that the majority of respondents have low knowledge and negative dietary behavior, with p-value = 0.012, indicating a significant relationship. Knowledge of risk factors for heart disease is very important for establishing healthy eating behavior, which has an impact on future heart health.
Impact of Sociocultural Mediation on Exhumation Timeline and DNA Yield in Medicolegal Investigations: A Retrospective Survival Analysis from Rural South Sumatra Dedi Kusmanto; Hendri Safitri; Firzan Dahlan; Fachrudin Sani
Sriwijaya Journal of Forensic and Medicolegal Vol. 4 No. 1 (2026): Sriwijaya Journal of Forensic and Medicolegal
Publisher : Phlox Institute: Indonesian Medical Research Organization

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.59345/sjfm.v4i1.256

Abstract

Introduction: Forensic medicolegal investigations in rural Indonesia are frequently conditioned by sociocultural practices that govern community consent for exhumation. Four distinct mediation pathways — direct family authorization, elder-mediated, religious leader-mediated, and multiple-mediator — are commonly observed in South Sumatran casework, yet their quantitative impact on exhumation timeline and downstream DNA extraction success has not been formally characterized. Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study of 120 consecutive medicolegal exhumation cases at Hospital X, South Sumatra, January 2018 – December 2022. Mediation type was classified from case file records. Time-to-exhumation was analysed by Kaplan-Meier survival estimation and log-rank testing; adjusted hazard ratios were estimated by Cox proportional hazards regression. Binary DNA extraction success (≥1 ng/µL by real-time PCR) was modelled by multivariable logistic regression with 1000-iteration bootstrap confidence intervals. Results: The four mediation groups (Direct n=35; Elder n=42; Religious n=31; Multiple n=12) were well-balanced on demographic and burial covariates (all p > 0.05) but differed significantly in exhumation delay (median 13, 27.5, 42, and 67 days respectively; p < 0.001). Global log-rank test confirmed significant between-group differences in time-to-exhumation (χ² = 26.41, df = 3, p < 0.001). Overall DNA success was 70.0% (84/120). Religious leader-mediated cases had significantly lower odds of DNA success in multivariable analysis (aOR 0.361, 95% CI 0.144–0.904, p = 0.030). Exhumation delay >30 days (OR 0.411, 95% CI 0.228–0.742, p = 0.003) and male gender (aOR 2.029, 95% CI 1.017–4.046, p = 0.045) were independently associated with DNA outcome. Conclusion: Sociocultural mediation type is a significant and independent predictor of both exhumation timeline and DNA extraction success in South Sumatran rural forensic casework. Religious leader-mediated cases incur a 29-day median delay compared with directly authorized cases, translating into measurable reductions in DNA yield. Formalisation of a Community Forensic Mediation Protocol at the provincial level is recommended.