Incidence of Non-Communicable Diseases in Urban and Rural Areas of Indonesia

Authors

  • Putri Ramadani Universitas Muhammadiyah Purwokerto
  • Aina Shofi Salsabila Nur Amalia Faculty of Public Health, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya
  • Naw Htoo Kalu Paw Medical Superintendent KBC Hospital

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30595/jhepr.v2i2.179

Keywords:

non-communicable, rural, urban

Abstract

Introduction:

NCDs were known of causing 74% of deaths worldwide, and 77% of all these deaths are in low- and middle-income countries. The prevalence of NCD in Indonesia has increased over the past five years as it has in the majority of other Low Middle-Income Countries (LMICs) in the Asia Pacific area. The objective of this study is to examine the incidence of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in urban and rural areas.

Methodology:

This study used secondary data from the Indonesian Family Life Survey conducted in 2014-2015 (wave 5). A total of 16,204 households and 50,148 individuals were interviewed by the IFLS-5 in 2014-2015. The data reflects the entire country of Indonesia and was collected by stratified random sampling from province to residence level. We involved respondents between the ages of 18 and 64 as the inclusion criterion for this research. The exclusion criteria include those with unknown or incomplete data. A total of 26,437 participants were involved in this study.

Result: People with CKD were nearly the same in urban and rural areas (55.91% and 44.09%); cholesterol disease (76.16% and 23.84%); CVD (63.38% and 36.62%); hypertension (62.57% and 37.43%); diabetes (74.42% and 25.58%); stroke (67.65% and 32.35%).

Conclusions:

Chronic kidney disease was nearly equal in both urban and rural; while cholesterol, cardiovascular, hypertension, diabetes, and stroke were higher in urban areas. This could be worthwhile to consider as part of improving NCD prevention and treatment.

Keywords: non-communicable, rural, urban.

References

Siddiqi, K. Non-communicable diseases key facts by WHO. Public Health: An action guide to improving health (2022).

Checkley, W. et al. Management of NCD in low- And middle-income countries. Global Heart 9, 431–443 (2014).

Kemenkes RI. Hasil Riset Kesehatan Dasar Tahun 2018. Kementrian Kesehatan RI 53, 1689–1699 (2018).

Purnamasari, D. The Emergence of Non-communicable Disease in Indonesia. Acta medica Indonesiana 50, 273–274 (2018).

Sujarwoto & Maharani, A. Participation in community-based healthcare interventions and non-communicable diseases early detection of general population in Indonesia. SSM - Population Health 19, 101236 (2022).

Oommen, A. M., Abraham, V. J., George, K. & Jose, V. J. Prevalence of risk factors for non-communicable diseases in rural & urban Tamil Nadu. Indian Journal of Medical Research 144, 460–471 (2016).

Tasmini, T. et al. Kadar glukosa darah dan tekanan darah pada penduduk pedesaan dan perkotaan di Daerah Istimewa Yogyakarta. Journal of Community Empowerment for Health 1, 45–53 (2018).

Maliangkay, K. S., Rahma, U., Putri, S. & Istanti, N. D. Analisis Peran Promosi Kesehatan Dalam Mendukung Keberhasilan Program Pencegahan Penyakit Tidak Menular Di Indonesia. Jurnal Medika Nusantara 1, 108–122 (2023).

Wahidin, M., Agustiya, R. I. & Putro, G. Beban penyakit dan program pencegahan dan pengendalian penyakit tidak menular di indonesia. J Epidemiol Kesehat Indones 6, 105–112 (2023).

Liu, X. et al. Cohort Profile: The Henan Rural Cohort: A prospective study of chronic non-communicable diseases. International Journal of Epidemiology 48, 1756-1756J (2019).

Al-Shdaifat, E. A. & Manaf, M. R. A. The economic burden of hemodialysis in Jordan. Indian Journal of Medical Sciences 67, 103–116 (2013).

Lazo-Porras, M. et al. Low HDL cholesterol as a cardiovascular risk factor in rural, urban, and rural-urban migrants: PERU MIGRANT cohort study. Atherosclerosis 246, 36–43 (2016).

Ekonomi, S., Indeks, D. a N., Tubuh, M., Pria, I. M. T. & Dalam, D. Kaitannya Dengan Faktor Risiko Penyakit Jantung Koroner Di Perdesaan Dan Perkotaan Bogor-Jawa Barat. Jurnal Gizi dan Pangan 5, 15–25 (2010).

Maharani, A. et al. Cardiovascular disease risk factor prevalence and estimated 10-year cardiovascular risk scores in Indonesia: The SMARThealth Extend study. PLoS ONE 14, 1–13 (2019).

Shafiq, M. et al. Cohort profile: LIFE course study in CARdiovascular disease Epidemiology (LIFECARE). International Journal of Epidemiology 47, 1399-1400G (2018).

Arsyad, D. S. et al. Modifiable risk factors in adults with and without prior cardiovascular disease: findings from the Indonesian National Basic Health Research. BMC Public Health 22, 660 (2022).

Naomi, W. S., Picauly, I. & Toy, S. M. Faktor Risiko Kejadian Penyakit Jantung Koroner. Media Kesehatan Masyarakat 3, 99–107 (2021).

Peltzer, K. & Pengpid, S. The Prevalence and Social Determinants of Hypertension among Adults in Indonesia: A Cross-Sectional Population-Based National Survey. International Journal of Hypertension 2018, (2018).

Hussain, M. A., Al Mamun, A., Reid, C. & Huxley, R. R. Prevalence, awareness, treatment and control of hypertension in Indonesian adults aged ≥40 years: Findings from the Indonesia Family Life Survey (IFLS). PLoS ONE 11, 1–16 (2016).

El Islamy, I. et al. Faktor Determinan Kejadian Hipertensi di Desa Sikeben Kecamatan Sibolangit Kabupaten Deli Serdang. Jurnal Ilmiah Universitas Batanghari Jambi 23, 601–607 (2023).

Tanoey, J. & Becher, H. Diabetes prevalence and risk factors of early-onset adult diabetes: results from the Indonesian family life survey. Global Health Action 14, (2021).

Federation, I. D. Diabetes Atlas Indonesia. Diabetes Report 2000-2045 https://www.diabetesatlas.org/data/en/country/94/id.html (2023).

Budi, H. & Bahar, I. Faktor Resiko Stroke Hemorragic Pada Pasien Usia Produktif. Jurnal Sehat Mandiri 12, 29–36 (2017).

Howard, G. Rural-urban differences in stroke risk. Preventive Medicine 152, 106661 (2021).

Kamin Mukaz, D. et al. Rural/urban differences in the prevalence of stroke risk factors: A cross-sectional analysis from the REGARDS study. Journal of Rural Health 38, 668–673 (2022).

Published

29.08.2024

How to Cite

Ramadani, P., Amalia, A. S. S. N. ., & Paw, N. H. K. (2024). Incidence of Non-Communicable Diseases in Urban and Rural Areas of Indonesia. Journal of Health Economic and Policy Research (JHEPR), 2(2), 35–39. https://doi.org/10.30595/jhepr.v2i2.179