PROSIDING INTERNASIONAL KEPERAWATAN Proceedings of the International Conference on Nursing and Health Sciences Volume 1 No 1, November 2020
HEALTH WORKERS MOTIVATION IN THE IMPLEMENTATION EARLY INITIATION OF BREASTFEEDING
Dublin Core
Title
PROSIDING INTERNASIONAL KEPERAWATAN Proceedings of the International Conference on Nursing and Health Sciences Volume 1 No 1, November 2020
HEALTH WORKERS MOTIVATION IN THE IMPLEMENTATION EARLY INITIATION OF BREASTFEEDING
HEALTH WORKERS MOTIVATION IN THE IMPLEMENTATION EARLY INITIATION OF BREASTFEEDING
Subject
early initiation of breastfeeding; health worker; motivation
Description
Early initiation of breastfeeding is the right of every baby. The obligation for health workers who
provide assistance during labor is giving early initiate breastfeeding. However, not all babies are
given an IMD and not all health workers do this. The causes are the lack of motivation of
health workers in implementing early initiation of breastfeeding. The purpose of this study was to
determine the motivation of health workers in implementation early initiation of breastfeeding at
RSUD Dr. H. Soewondo Kendal. The research design used is quantitative with descriptive methods.
The sample in this study amounted to 28 respondents with a total sampling technique. Instruments in
the form of a questionnaire. Data analysis uses univariate. The results showed that the motivation of
health workers in implementing Early Breastfeeding Initiation was in the "medium" category as much
as 57.1%. Intrinsic motivation of health workers in the implementation of early breastfeeding
initiation is mostly done, namely happy when the IMD is successful. Extrinsic motivation of health
workers in the implementation of early breastfeeding initiation is mostly done by conducting IMD
because there is a policy from the government. This research is expected to be used as input for
health workers, especially midwives, in increasing motivation to provide early breastfeeding
initiation.
provide assistance during labor is giving early initiate breastfeeding. However, not all babies are
given an IMD and not all health workers do this. The causes are the lack of motivation of
health workers in implementing early initiation of breastfeeding. The purpose of this study was to
determine the motivation of health workers in implementation early initiation of breastfeeding at
RSUD Dr. H. Soewondo Kendal. The research design used is quantitative with descriptive methods.
The sample in this study amounted to 28 respondents with a total sampling technique. Instruments in
the form of a questionnaire. Data analysis uses univariate. The results showed that the motivation of
health workers in implementing Early Breastfeeding Initiation was in the "medium" category as much
as 57.1%. Intrinsic motivation of health workers in the implementation of early breastfeeding
initiation is mostly done, namely happy when the IMD is successful. Extrinsic motivation of health
workers in the implementation of early breastfeeding initiation is mostly done by conducting IMD
because there is a policy from the government. This research is expected to be used as input for
health workers, especially midwives, in increasing motivation to provide early breastfeeding
initiation.
Creator
Eka Nur Fitriana, Yuni Puji Widiastuti, Istioningsih
Source
http://jurnal.globalhealthsciencegroup.com/index.php/PICNHS
Publisher
Global Health Science Group
Date
November 2020
Contributor
PERI IRAWAN
Format
PDF
Language
ENGLISH
Type
TEXT
Files
Citation
Eka Nur Fitriana, Yuni Puji Widiastuti, Istioningsih, “PROSIDING INTERNASIONAL KEPERAWATAN Proceedings of the International Conference on Nursing and Health Sciences Volume 1 No 1, November 2020
HEALTH WORKERS MOTIVATION IN THE IMPLEMENTATION EARLY INITIATION OF BREASTFEEDING,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed April 6, 2025, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/2973.
HEALTH WORKERS MOTIVATION IN THE IMPLEMENTATION EARLY INITIATION OF BREASTFEEDING,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed April 6, 2025, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/2973.