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Retna Siwi Padmawati

Researcher at Gadjah Mada University

Publications -  72
Citations -  543

Retna Siwi Padmawati is an academic researcher from Gadjah Mada University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 57 publications receiving 402 citations.

Papers
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Physician assessment of patient smoking in Indonesia: a public health priority

TL;DR: Indonesian physicians need to be educated on the importance of routinely asking their patients about their tobacco use and offering practical advice on how to quit smoking.
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Religious and community leaders' acceptance of rotavirus vaccine introduction in Yogyakarta, Indonesia: a qualitative study.

TL;DR: The need for better stakeholder engagement prior to vaccine availability and the potentially important role of religious and community leaders in rotavirus vaccine acceptability in the majority Muslim community of Yogyakarta, Indonesia are highlighted.
Journal Article

Smoking behavior among former tuberculosis patients in Indonesia: intervention is needed.

TL;DR: A pilot intervention is mounting to train DOTS providers, who are mostly family members of patients, to deliver smoking cessation messages and reinforce the cessation advice provided by physicians during and following TB treatment.
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Impacts of stigma on HIV risk for women who inject drugs in Java: A qualitative study.

TL;DR: The stigmatization ofdrug use, particularly of drug use by women, in Indonesia appears to have contributed to significant shame, isolation from mainstream society and high rates of sharing injecting equipment with a small group of trusted friends (particularly the partner).
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Developing a smoke free household initiative: an Indonesian case study

TL;DR: A community based survey in Indonesia that investigated women's exposure to secondhand smoke in LMICs and local perceptions of SHS risk to women and children found a low sense of self efficacy in individually getting their husbands to quit smoking in their homes but a strong sense of collective efficacy that husbands might agree to a well‐publicized and agreed‐upon community household smoking ban.