Paper Title
FAMILY RESILIENCE MODEL “TAMNE YISAN KEFASE” IN ASYMPTOMATIC MALARIA DETECTION IN KEEROM DISTRICT, PAPUA PROVINCE

Abstract
Introduction: Malaria morbidity and mortality still show significant numbers in endemic countries and indicate a major challenge to achieve the target of malaria elimination by 2030. One of the complications is silent infection from asymptomatic malaria as a silent transmitter, which greatly affects the spread of malaria transmission without being realized by asymptomatic sufferers. Keerom Regency, Papua Province Papua is still a high malaria endemic area. Family resilience plays an important role in malaria prevention and control efforts, especially in early detection of asymptomatic malaria. Method: This Literature Review aims to synthesize existing evidence on Family Resilience in the detection of asymptomatic malaria using the cultural approach "Tamne Yisan Kefase" in Keerom Regency, Papua Province. The search was accessed from online databases indexed in PubMed, Elsevier, DOAJ, Scopus, and Google Scholar, 460 articles were found, with 10 years of literature (2013-2023). Results: shows that family resilience is very important related to knowledge, attitudes, behavior of family members towards malaria, access to health facilities and health information, and cultural factors, such as beliefs, values, and perceptions, play an important role in shaping health behavior. The "Tamne Yisan Kefase" approach, meaning uniting to build is a local philosophy in Keerom Regency that emphasizes empathy, solidarity, and mutual support in increasing family resilience to the detection of asymptomatic malaria. Conclusion: This literature review provides a comprehensive overview of the existing evidence on family resilience in the detection of symptomatic malaria using the "Tamne Yisan Kefase" cultural approach in Keerom Regency, Papua. Keywords: Asymptomatic Malaria, Family Resilience, Tamne Yisan Kefase.