Berita Kedokteran Masyarakat
Vol 42 No 05 (2026)

Distribution of maternal and child characteristics based on stunting status among children under five years in a primary health care setting

Nursindia A Sugoro (Master of Epidemiology Study Program, Faculty of Public Health, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia)
Jumriani Ansar (Department of Epidemiology, Faculty of Public Health, Universitas Hasanuddin, Makassar, Indonesia)
Eny Qurniyawati (Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, Population Studies, and Health Promotion, Faculty of Public Health, Universitas Airlangga / Research Group for Health and Wellbeing of Women and Children, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia)
Hiba Adam (Institute of Public Health, United Arab Emirates University, United Arab Emirates)



Article Info

Publish Date
22 May 2026

Abstract

Purpose: Stunting remains a major public health concern in Indonesia, particularly among children under five, as it is linked to impaired growth and developmental outcomes. This study aimed to describe the distribution of maternal and child characteristics according to stunting status in a primary health care setting. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted among children under 5 years of age (0–59 months) using systematic random sampling (n = 110). Data were collected through structured interviews with mothers and supplemented by health center records. Stunting status was determined using height-for-age z-scores from the 2020 Primary Health Care Center report, in accordance with standard child growth monitoring practices. A bivariate analysis using the chi-square test was conducted to examine crude associations between maternal and child characteristics and stunting. Results: Stunting was more common among children whose mothers had lower nutritional knowledge, lower educational attainment, and shorter maternal height. A higher proportion of stunting was also observed among children with a history of infectious diseases and those with limited access to health services. Maternal nutritional knowledge, maternal education, maternal height, history of infectious diseases, and access to health services were statistically associated with stunting (p < 0.05), while household income was not (p = 0.094). Conclusion: Several maternal and child characteristics were statistically associated with stunting at the bivariate level. These findings highlight the importance of strengthening maternal education, nutrition counseling, infection prevention, and access to primary health care services. However, the results should be interpreted cautiously as they reflect crude associations rather than independent effects.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

bkm

Publisher

Subject

Nursing Public Health

Description

Berita Kedokteran Masyarakat (BKM Public Health and Community Medicine) is a peer-reviewed and open access journal that deals with the fields of public health and public medicine. The topics of the article will be grouped according to the main message of the author. This focus covers areas and scope ...