dc.description.abstract | Preeclampsia are some of the symptoms that occur in pregnant, childbirth and
puerperal women which are characterized by hypertension, edema, and increased
proteinuria. Preeclampsia usually occurs when pregnancy enters the age of 20
weeks to 48 hours after the birth process, in that condition there are undesirable
complications during pregnancy that can make mothers more vulnerable to
psychological disorders, one of which is stress. Stress experienced during
pregnancy can affect the health of the baby and can also improve poor sleep quality.
This study aims to analyze the relationship of stress levels with the quality of
preeclampsia sleep in the Tempurejo Community Health Center in Jember. This
research was conducted on 31 preeclampsia mothers using a correlational
research design with a cross sectional approach and using total sampling
techniques. Data collection using questionnaires stress and sleep quality. The
results showed 19 (61.3)% of respondents experienced mild stress and 26 (83.9)%
of respondents experienced poor sleep quality. The results of data analysis using
the spearmen statistical test obtained p value 0.001 and r = 0.894, which means
there is a relationship between stress levels and sleep quality or ha is accepted.
Value r = 0.396 means that the correlation between stress levels and sleep quality
in preeclampsia has a positive correlation with weak correlation strength. Nursing
implications for further research can intervene in interventions that can reduce
stress levels with the quality of sleep in preeclampsia mothers so as to reduce the
factors of preeclampsia. | en_US |