PROSIDING INTERNASIONAL KEPERAWATAN Proceedings of the International Conference on Nursing and Health Sciences, Volume 4 No 1
IMPLEMENTATION OF THE FAMILY HEALTH PROMOTION MODEL (FHPM) ON FAMILY COMMITMENT IN TB TRANSMISSION PREVENTIVE ACTION AMONG THE HEADS OF FAMILIESOF TB PATIENTS: A STRUCTURAL MODEL
Dublin Core
Title
PROSIDING INTERNASIONAL KEPERAWATAN Proceedings of the International Conference on Nursing and Health Sciences, Volume 4 No 1
IMPLEMENTATION OF THE FAMILY HEALTH PROMOTION MODEL (FHPM) ON FAMILY COMMITMENT IN TB TRANSMISSION PREVENTIVE ACTION AMONG THE HEADS OF FAMILIESOF TB PATIENTS: A STRUCTURAL MODEL
IMPLEMENTATION OF THE FAMILY HEALTH PROMOTION MODEL (FHPM) ON FAMILY COMMITMENT IN TB TRANSMISSION PREVENTIVE ACTION AMONG THE HEADS OF FAMILIESOF TB PATIENTS: A STRUCTURAL MODEL
Subject
commitment; family function; family support; perception; tuberculosis
Description
Tuberculosis (TB) transmission prevention centering on family is an effective strategy to suppress the
emergence of new clusters of pulmonary TB transmission. The commitment of family heads and several
factors are related to this action. This study was conducted to identify, examine, and analyze the
determinants of family commitment in preventing the transmission of pulmonary TB. This study applied a
quantitative cross-sectional approach to 170 family heads of pulmonary TB patients using proportionate
simple random sampling. The family health promotion model (FHPM) was used to analyze family
commitment determinants in preventing TB transmission. Data were collected using a questionnaire. SEM
analysis was utilized to determine the paths and the relationship between family function, perception of the
disease transmission risk, as well as family support, and commitment to action to prevent TB transmission.
This study recorded that 50.6% of respondents were male with an average age of 46.75 ± 46 and an age
range of 36-55 years, 53% had a high school education; 25.9% were self-employed; had an average decent
living need of 1.93 ± 0.85, 75.3% had nuclear family, and 47.1% were from patriarchal family. Model fit
was achieved in the structural equation (Chi-square (χ2) = 173.44; df = 71, RMSEA = 0.072≤ 0.08; GFI =
0.90≥ 0.90; RMR = 0.019≤ 0.05; NFI = 0.98≥ 0.90; CFI = 0.99≥ 0.90; TLI = 0.98≥ 0.95; IFI = 0.99≥ 0.90;
PGFI = 0.59; PNFI = 0,76). All dimensions and item scales are significantly related to their respective latent
constructs. All factors forming the FHPM framework have a significant positive direct effect between latent
variables. Factors from the FHPM framework significantly (family function t = 8.74, perception t = 4.46,
and family support t = 7.37) have an influence on commitment to action to prevent pulmonary TB
transmission. Family function is the most powerful factor explaining commitment to preventive action. This
study reveals the paths and influences of family function, perception, and support on a commitment to
prevent pulmonary TB transmission through structural model analysis.
emergence of new clusters of pulmonary TB transmission. The commitment of family heads and several
factors are related to this action. This study was conducted to identify, examine, and analyze the
determinants of family commitment in preventing the transmission of pulmonary TB. This study applied a
quantitative cross-sectional approach to 170 family heads of pulmonary TB patients using proportionate
simple random sampling. The family health promotion model (FHPM) was used to analyze family
commitment determinants in preventing TB transmission. Data were collected using a questionnaire. SEM
analysis was utilized to determine the paths and the relationship between family function, perception of the
disease transmission risk, as well as family support, and commitment to action to prevent TB transmission.
This study recorded that 50.6% of respondents were male with an average age of 46.75 ± 46 and an age
range of 36-55 years, 53% had a high school education; 25.9% were self-employed; had an average decent
living need of 1.93 ± 0.85, 75.3% had nuclear family, and 47.1% were from patriarchal family. Model fit
was achieved in the structural equation (Chi-square (χ2) = 173.44; df = 71, RMSEA = 0.072≤ 0.08; GFI =
0.90≥ 0.90; RMR = 0.019≤ 0.05; NFI = 0.98≥ 0.90; CFI = 0.99≥ 0.90; TLI = 0.98≥ 0.95; IFI = 0.99≥ 0.90;
PGFI = 0.59; PNFI = 0,76). All dimensions and item scales are significantly related to their respective latent
constructs. All factors forming the FHPM framework have a significant positive direct effect between latent
variables. Factors from the FHPM framework significantly (family function t = 8.74, perception t = 4.46,
and family support t = 7.37) have an influence on commitment to action to prevent pulmonary TB
transmission. Family function is the most powerful factor explaining commitment to preventive action. This
study reveals the paths and influences of family function, perception, and support on a commitment to
prevent pulmonary TB transmission through structural model analysis.
Creator
Martono, Muhammad Akhyar, Eti Poncorini Pamungkasari, Anik Lestari, Sapja Anantanyu, Retno Setyowati
Source
http://jurnal.globalhealthsciencegroup.com/index.php/PICNHS
Publisher
Global Health Science Group
Date
January - June 2023
Contributor
PERI IRAWAN
Format
PDF
Language
ENGLISH
Type
TEXT
Files
Citation
Martono, Muhammad Akhyar, Eti Poncorini Pamungkasari, Anik Lestari, Sapja Anantanyu, Retno Setyowati, “PROSIDING INTERNASIONAL KEPERAWATAN Proceedings of the International Conference on Nursing and Health Sciences, Volume 4 No 1
IMPLEMENTATION OF THE FAMILY HEALTH PROMOTION MODEL (FHPM) ON FAMILY COMMITMENT IN TB TRANSMISSION PREVENTIVE ACTION AMONG THE HEADS OF FAMILIESOF TB PATIENTS: A STRUCTURAL MODEL,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed February 3, 2025, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/2802.
IMPLEMENTATION OF THE FAMILY HEALTH PROMOTION MODEL (FHPM) ON FAMILY COMMITMENT IN TB TRANSMISSION PREVENTIVE ACTION AMONG THE HEADS OF FAMILIESOF TB PATIENTS: A STRUCTURAL MODEL,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed February 3, 2025, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/2802.