The purpose of this researchwas to determine the relationship between knowledge aboutpregnancy and family support with anxiety in primigravida (first pregnancy) in facing labor.Themethod used in this research is the quantitative approach. Data is collected using questionnaires,regression analysis using a sample of 54 third trimester pregnant primigravida womens who carryout checks on Private Midwives Practices belong Vivi Umamiyanto, at Jl. Jambangan Surabaya.Theresults of the partial regression analysis between knowledge of pregnancy with anxiety showed at t= 0.715 p = 0.478 (p> 0.05), which means there is no significant relationship, as well as the resultof family support with anxiety showed t = 0.188 to p = 0.851 (p> 0.05), which means there is nosignificant relationship. The study also showed that simultaneous regression analysis coefficientshowed F = 0.315 p = 0.731 (p> 0.05) meaning that there are no significant relationship betweenknowledge about pregnancy and family support with anxiety. Effective contribution amounted toonly 1.2%. Meaning there is no significant relationship between the knowledge of pregnant womenabout pregnancy and family support with anxiety.It can be concluded that the results of regressionanalysis showed that there was no relationship between knowledge about pregnancy and familysupport with the anxiety of pregnant women. For further researchers is expected to select anothervariables are possible correlation with maternal anxiety in the face of labor.Keywords : Knowledge of Pregnancy, Family Support, Pregnancy Anxiety
Introduction: Drug abuse is very dangerous because it disrupts the ability to thinking process. Drugs have three dangerous characteristics, namely, addiction, tolerance, and habituation that cause an addict to be compelled to continue using drugs or to try drugs again. A former drug addict is prone to experience inability to pass through stress and stress due to symptoms of neurological dysfunction, physical craving suggestions, and loss of support from the environment. To deal with this situation, former drug addicts must defend themselves by bringing up a source of strength from within themselves called resilience. Increased self-resilience will help former drug addicts to cope with the difficulties experienced, times of crisis, avoid addiction, and overcome stress triggers. Methods: This study used a descriptive design and the sample size was 30 respondents with purposive sampling. The variables of this study was resilience measured through the questionnaire. Results: The results of descriptive analysis show that 16 (53.3%) respondents have low resilience, 6 (20%) respondents have very low resilience, and 8 (26.7%) respondents have sufficient resilience. Conclusion: The conclusion of this study is that most former drug addicts have low resilience. Health workers and facilitators play an important role in fostering the resilience of former drug addicts.
COVID-19 has become a global health emergency and has a complex impact on every aspect of people's lives. One of the vulnerable groups is pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers. Psychological well-being needs to be achieved by pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers to be able to get through conditions of uncertainty and threats during the pandemic. The purpose of this study was to analyze the factors that affect psychological well being in pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers during the COVID-19 in Surabaya. This research was an analytic correlational study with a cross sectional approach. The population of this study were all pregnant women and mothers who were breastfeeding with babies aged less than 6 months at the time of data collection, domiciled or resided in Surabaya. The sampling technique in this study was simple random sampling with a total sample of 198 respondents consisting of 130 pregnant women and 68 breastfeeding mothers. The results of the spearman rho test showed that income, history of pregnancy/birth history, history of COVID-19, and family support had an effect on the psychological well being of pregnant and lactating women. The COVID-19 history variable has the largest coefficient value which indicates that this variable has a strong influence on the psychological well being of pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers during the COVID-19 in Surabaya.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.