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dc.contributor.authorSuhartini, Leni-
dc.contributor.authorKusumaningrum, Hesti-
dc.contributor.authorNyoman Sulasmi, Ni-
dc.contributor.authorResty Rianto, Tiara-
dc.date.accessioned2022-08-03T04:38:54Z-
dc.date.available2022-08-03T04:38:54Z-
dc.date.issued2022-04-
dc.identifier.urihttp://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/1838-
dc.description.abstractThe Southeast Asian Journal of Midwifery Vol.8, No.1, April 2022, p:10-14 E-ISSN: 2476-972X P-ISSN: 2476-9738 journal-aipkind.or.id 10 RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE BABY'S BIRTH WEIGHT AND THE INCIDENCE OF PERINEAL TEARING Leni Suhartini1, Hesti Kusumaningrum2, Ni Nyoman Sulasmi3, Tiara Resty Rianto4 1,2,3,4 Diploma Midwifery Study ProgramSTIKes RSPAD Gatot Soebroto Jl. Abdul Rahman Saleh no 24 Jakarta Pusat ARTICLE INFORMATION: A B S T R A CT Article History: Date received : March 2022 Date in revision : March 2022 Dates in Publications : April 2022 Keywords: Childbirth, birth weight of the baby, perineal tear Childbirth is a physiological process and an important event in life that is often remembered by a woman throughout her life, where birth trauma most often occurs in the perineum. A perineal tear is a perineal laceration that occurs when the baby is born either naturally or through an episiotomy. This study aims to determine the relationship between the baby's birth weight and the level of perineal tear in mothers with normal delivery. The research method is quantitative with a cross-sectional analytical research design. The sample is 298 people. Data were collected by looking at the maternity room register book from January- December 2021. Data were analyzed with the help of Software Statistics Product and Service Solutions (SPSS) Version 25. Research Results: from 298 deliveries 256 respondents experienced perineal tears. 97 respondents to a grade 1 tear (32.6%), 156 respondents to a grade 2 tear (52.3%), and 3 respondents to a grade 3 tear (1%). Of the 298 mothers who gave birth, there were 256 deliveries with perineal tears with 206 (85.5%) baby weights <3365gr and 50 (87.7%) baby weights>3366 grams. Meanwhile, for mothers who experienced intact perineum, there were 42 respondents where the baby's weight < 3365 g was found in as many as 35 respondents (14.5%) and the baby's weight > 3366 there were 7 respondents (12.3%). The results of the chi-square test at = 0.05 obtained p = 0.821 (P> 0.05) this means that there is no relationship between the baby's birth weight and the incidence of perineal tears. Conclusion: there is no relationship between a baby's birth weight and the incidence of perineal tears.en_US
dc.subjectChildbirthen_US
dc.subjectbirth weight of the babyen_US
dc.subjectperineal tearen_US
dc.titleRELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE BABY'S BIRTH WEIGHT AND THE INCIDENCE OF PERINEAL TEARINGen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US
Appears in Collections:2. SEAJOM: The Southeast Asia Journal of Midwifery

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