Paediatrica Indonesiana
Vol 51 No 4 (2011): July 2011

School performance in pubertal adolescents with dysmenorrhea

Syamsir Alam (Department of Child Health, University of Sumatera Utara Medical School/Adam Malik Hospital, Medan, North Sumatera)
Hakimi Hakimi (Department of Child Health, University of Sumatera Utara Medical School/Adam Malik Hospital, Medan, North Sumatera)
Tiangsa Sembiring (Department of Child Health, University of Sumatera Utara Medical School/Adam Malik Hospital, Medan, North Sumatera)
Melda Deliana (Department of Child Health, University of Sumatera Utara Medical School/Adam Malik Hospital, Medan, North Sumatera)
Siska Mayasari Lubis (Department of Child Health, University of Sumatera Utara Medical School/Adam Malik Hospital, Medan, North Sumatera)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 Aug 2011

Abstract

Background Dysmenorrhea is a common gynecological symptom reported in adolescent girls. Prevalence of the condition has been reported to be 45 - 75%. Absenteeism from work and school as a result of dysmenorrhea is common (13 - 51% of women have been absent at least once, and 5 - 14% are often absent due to the severity of symptoms).Objective To compare school performance in pubertal adolescent girls with and without dysmenorrhea.Methods This cross-sectional study was conducted in June 2010 in adolescent females aged 12 - 18 years from the Musthafawiyah School, Mandailing Natal district, North Sumatera. Adolescent females with and without dysmenorrhea were recruited for this study. All participants completed questionnaires including age of menarche, length of menstrual cycle, length of bleeding, number of sanitary napkins used daily and school absences. School reports from two consecutive semesters in one year were used to evaluate subjects’ academic performance. An academic score of higher than 7.5 was considered good performance while scores of less than 7.5 were considered poor. We used the chi-square test to analyze differences in school performance between girls with and without dysmenorrhea.Results One hundred and sixteen participants were divided into 2 groups, those with and without dysmenorrhea, of 58 subjects each. We found no significant difference in school performance between the two groups, P=0.176 (95% CI -0.009 to -0.048 and P=0.08 (95%CI -0.052 to 0.024).Conclusion There was no significant difference in school performance of girls with and without dysmenorrhea.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

paediatrica-indonesiana

Publisher

Subject

Health Professions Medicine & Pharmacology

Description

Paediatrica Indonesiana is a medical journal devoted to the health, in a broad sense, affecting fetuses, infants, children, and adolescents, belonged to the Indonesian Pediatric Society. Its publications are directed to pediatricians and other medical practitioners or researchers at all levels of ...