Analysis Need Education for Postpartum Mothers
Dublin Core
Title
Analysis Need Education for Postpartum Mothers
Subject
education, mother, needs, postpartum
Description
Background: Postpartum mothers need education to maintain
themselves and their babies. Only a little study about material
education is based on what a mother and husband need. The
study aims to explore the need for education for postpartum
mothers and identify materials, methods, and educational
media needed by postpartum mothers.
Methods: This study employed mixed methods with a sequential
exploratory design. Stage 1 was done through a qualitative
study with in-depth interviews with the seven participants using
purposive sampling. Analyze the data with thematic deductive
analysis. The quantitative phase used 300 postpartum mothers
with a purposive sampling technique. An instrument study
questionnaire was prepared by researchers, and a trial was
conducted on 50 respondents with valid and reliable results.
Quantitative data analysis with descriptive analysis
Results: It found six themes, namely "education to take care of
a mother,” “education needs to take care of a baby,” "timegiving information,” "methods of providing education,”
educational media,” and "sources of information.” The most
needed maternal care educational material is about
breastfeeding (4.55 ± 0.531), breast care (4.46 ± 0.531), and
mental health (4.45 ± 0.584). Material related to baby care that
is mainly needed is immunizations (4.59 ± 0.493), signs and
dangers of newborns (4.55 ± 0.685), and umbilical cord care
(4.53 ± 0.557). The media chosen by the mother are online
media and video. Direct education method by health workers.
Timing of education during pregnancy.
Conclusion: Giving education should be customized with materials needed by the mother. Education will succeed if supported by educational media, appropriate methods, and time in education and carried out by healthcare professionals.
themselves and their babies. Only a little study about material
education is based on what a mother and husband need. The
study aims to explore the need for education for postpartum
mothers and identify materials, methods, and educational
media needed by postpartum mothers.
Methods: This study employed mixed methods with a sequential
exploratory design. Stage 1 was done through a qualitative
study with in-depth interviews with the seven participants using
purposive sampling. Analyze the data with thematic deductive
analysis. The quantitative phase used 300 postpartum mothers
with a purposive sampling technique. An instrument study
questionnaire was prepared by researchers, and a trial was
conducted on 50 respondents with valid and reliable results.
Quantitative data analysis with descriptive analysis
Results: It found six themes, namely "education to take care of
a mother,” “education needs to take care of a baby,” "timegiving information,” "methods of providing education,”
educational media,” and "sources of information.” The most
needed maternal care educational material is about
breastfeeding (4.55 ± 0.531), breast care (4.46 ± 0.531), and
mental health (4.45 ± 0.584). Material related to baby care that
is mainly needed is immunizations (4.59 ± 0.493), signs and
dangers of newborns (4.55 ± 0.685), and umbilical cord care
(4.53 ± 0.557). The media chosen by the mother are online
media and video. Direct education method by health workers.
Timing of education during pregnancy.
Conclusion: Giving education should be customized with materials needed by the mother. Education will succeed if supported by educational media, appropriate methods, and time in education and carried out by healthcare professionals.
Creator
Nengah Runiari, Dewa Made Ruspawan, Suratiah
Source
https://doi.org/10.37341/jkg.v8i2.824
Publisher
Poltekkes Surakarta
Date
December 2023
Contributor
Sri Wahyuni
Format
PDF
Language
English
Type
Text
Files
Collection
Citation
Nengah Runiari, Dewa Made Ruspawan, Suratiah, “Analysis Need Education for Postpartum Mothers,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed February 22, 2026, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/10876.