Jurnal Kesehatan Manarang
Vol 11 No 3 (2025): December 2025

Stop Patriarchy Is A Key To Preventing Stunting: A Qualitative Study Of Indigenous Peoples In Central Maluku Regency

Marasabessy, Nur Baharia (Unknown)
Tuhumena, Femi Serly (Unknown)
Rauf, Saidah (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
15 Dec 2025

Abstract

Stunting among children under five remains a major public health problem in Indonesia, particularly within indigenous communities where social, cultural, and gender structures strongly influence caregiving practices. Despite numerous nutrition-specific interventions, the persistence of stunting suggests the presence of deeper sociocultural determinants, particularly patriarchal norms and unequal gender roles that affect maternal and child well-being. This qualitative case study was conducted from July to October 2023 in three indigenous villages of Central Maluku Regency: Ulahahan (coastal), Piliana, and Elemata (mountainous). Participants (n=34) were purposively recruited, including mothers of stunted children, community and traditional leaders, religious representatives, and healthcare providers. Data were collected through 30 in-depth interviews and four focus group discussions (FGDs), transcribed verbatim, and analyzed thematically. Five interlinked themes emerged: (1) child-related factors (irregular eating, non-exclusive breastfeeding, recurrent illness); (2) cultural practices (traditional birth attendants, early introduction of porridge/papeda); (3) patriarchal norms and gender roles (domestic labor as “women’s oath,” pamali prohibitions on men doing “women’s work,” women’s double burden despite agricultural labor); (4) economic constraints (carbohydrate-heavy diets, low protein access, reliance on subsistence farming and social assistance); and (5) maternal factors (short birth intervals, early marriage, limited ANC, stress). Descriptively, most stunted children were aged 25–59 months (79.4%) and male (67.6%); 70.6% of mothers married before 20 years of age, and 82.3% had primary education or less. Stunting in these settings is embedded in patriarchal cultural systems that institutionalize unequal household responsibilities and constrain maternal time, autonomy, and caregiving quality. Gender-transformative, community-based strategies, such as engaging men and customary leaders, promoting equitable domestic roles, strengthening women’s economic and decision-making power, and integrating gender-sensitive nutrition approaches, are essential to reduce stunting.

Copyrights © 2025






Journal Info

Abbrev

m

Publisher

Subject

Health Professions Nursing Public Health

Description

Jurnal Kesehatan Manarang is a health journal that is independent, trustworthy, rational, accountable and global that includes researches with quantitative and qualitative ...