217 results
Search Results
2. Patient personal data protection: comparing the health-care regulations in Indonesia, Singapore and the European Union.
- Author
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Kharisma, Dona Budi and Diakanza, Alvalerie
- Subjects
MEDICAL ethics laws ,RIGHT of privacy ,DATA security laws ,DATA security failures ,HUMAN rights ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,COMPARATIVE studies ,GOVERNMENT regulation - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to identify the reasons why cases of leakage of patient personal data often occur in the health sector. This paper also analyzes personal data protection regulations in the health sector from a comparative legal perspective between Indonesia, Singapore and the European Union (EU). Design/methodology/approach: This type of research is legal research. The research approach used is the statute approach and conceptual approach. The focus of this study in this research is Indonesia with a comparative study in Singapore and the EU. Findings: Cases of leakage of patient personal data in Indonesia often occur. In 2021, the data for 230,000 COVID-19 patients was leaked and sold on the Rapid Forums dark web forum. A patient's personal data is a human right that must be protected. Compared to Singapore and the EU, Indonesia is a country that does not yet have a law on the protection of personal data. This condition causes cases of leakage of patients' personal data to occur frequently. Research limitations/implications: This study analyzes the regulation and protection of patients' personal data in Indonesia, Singapore and the EU to construct a regulatory design for the protection of patients' personal data. Practical implications: The results of this study are useful for constructing regulations governing the protection of patients' personal data. The regulation is to protect the patient's personal data like a patient's human right. Social implications: The ideal regulatory design can prevent data breaches. Based on the results of comparative studies, in Singapore and the EU, cases of personal data leakage are rare because they have a regulatory framework regarding the protection of patients' personal data. Originality/value: Legal strategies that can be taken to prevent and overcome patient data breaches include the establishment of an Act on Personal Data Protection; the Personal Data Protection Commission; and management of patients' personal data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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3. Comparative approach in public health social security: a legal case study of the Indonesian, France, and Singapore health systems.
- Author
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Paluttri, Sukri
- Subjects
SOCIAL security ,HEALTH systems agencies ,HEALTH services accessibility ,PUBLIC health infrastructure ,QUALITATIVE research ,HUMAN services programs ,HEALTH policy ,FINANCIAL stress ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,FINANCIAL management ,PUBLIC health ,COMPARATIVE studies ,LOCAL government - Abstract
Purpose: This research paper aimed to study the legal structure of top-performing health governance systems and compare them with the Indonesian health social security system to identify the main differences and provide recommendations for Indonesian and other developing countries' health policymakers and administrators. Design/methodology/approach: Using formative research with a conceptual approach and statute approach as method in this study. Data was gathered using the document study technique, which studies various documents, especially legal documents related to health law, linked to legal purpose theories. Moreover, the World Health Organization ranking was considered to choose the two countries (France and Singapore) with a high social health security system for comparative analysis. All data collected has been analyzed using a qualitative and theoretical basis. Content analysis was performed by analyzing the legal documents, and the regulatory framework of all three countries was deeply analyzed to draw conclusions and recommendations. Findings: Indonesia has specific laws to implement a social security system in the health sector. However, the lack of the best medical facilities and infrastructure and weak implementation of existing laws were identified as major reasons behind the poor health security system compared to comparative countries. Also, as a developing nation Indonesian Government face budgetary pressures and huge population challenges to meet required standards. Thus, the financing approaches used by Singapore and France may help developing countries meet these challenges effectively. Therefore, there is a dire need to strengthen the social health security system all over the country with amendments to laws and ensure the implementation of prevailing laws and regulations. Practical implications: Providing understanding related to the social security health system in Indonesia along with a detailed description of the sound social health security system in France and Singapore will further provide an avenue for the researchers to critically analyze this line of study to devise some valuable suggestions further and to draw loopholes in the system. Originality/value: A comparative approach for legal studies in the health sector is rare. So, this research advanced the social security health system-related literature and legal studies on the health sector by using this comparative approach to develop policy insights and future research directions, which will further help the field to grow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. A comparative study of artificial intelligence in education psychology: the cases of Indonesia and Thailand.
- Author
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Utina, Sitriah Salim, Chusniyah, Tutut, Inseachiangmai, Jittakorn, Zahra, Gebi Angelina, and Pambudi, Kukuh Setyo
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ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,BEST practices ,WEBSITES ,EDUCATORS ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Various applications of artificial intelligence (AI) are currently being developed to enhance and transform the educational experience. However, things like culture, society, and ethics may have an impact on how artificial intelligence is implemented in classrooms all around the world. This study aims to analyze the existing use of AI in education in two Southeast Asian nations, namely Indonesia and Thailand, and to compare those two environments in terms of their potential. Specifically, the research will focus on Indonesia. We gathered papers, publications, and websites from both countries in order to perform an in-depth analysis as part of a comprehensive literature study that we carried out. The ethical and social repercussions of using AI in education, the best practices and suggestions for using AI in education, the possibilities and problems presented by using AI in education, and the preparedness and obstructions presented by using AI in education. Our study demonstrates that there are parallels and variances between the perceptions and experiences of educators and students from the two nations about the use of AI in educational settings, and it also makes recommendations for future research and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Comparative study of disgorgement and disgorgement fund regulations in Indonesia, the USA and the UK.
- Author
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Kharisma, Dona Budi and Hunaifa, Afilya
- Subjects
INVESTORS ,LEGAL research ,CAPITAL market ,COMPARATIVE method ,COMPARATIVE studies ,ILLEGAL logging - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is two-fold: to analyze the legal issues on disgorgement and disgorgement funds in Indonesia, the USA and the UK and to construct the ideal law regarding disgorgement and disgorgement fund. Design/methodology/approach: The type of legal research in this paper is normative legal research. The research approach used is a comparative approach and a legal approach. The legal materials used are all regulations on the disgorgement law and the disgorgement fund that apply in Indonesia, the USA and the UK. The technique of collecting legal materials is done by using library research techniques. Findings: The rapid growth of the capital market in Indonesia still faces various legal issues such as various market manipulations, insider trading and illegal investment management activities. Based on the results of a comparative study, Indonesia does not yet have a calculation mechanism regarding the imposition of disgorgement on violators. Unlike Indonesia, the USA has the rules of practice and rules on fair funds and exchange commissions, and the UK has the decision procedure and penalties manual, which regulates the mechanism for calculating the imposition of disgorgement. Indonesia is solely able to use administrative action in imposing disgorgement, while in the USA and the UK, it can be through courts or direct administrative actions. These legal issues have resulted due to the lack of confidence by international investors and the growth of the investment climate in Indonesia itself. Research limitations/implications: This study examines the regulation of disgorgement and disgorgement funds in Indonesia, the USA and the UK. However, the focus of research in this paper is limited to legal issues that occurred in Indonesia. Practical implications: The results of this study may help to construct the ideal regulations on disgorgement and disgorgement funds in various countries and protect the capital market of the investors. Social implications: The results of this study are expected to be helpful for the investment climate in various countries, especially developing countries. Originality/value: The ideal legal construction regarding disgorgement, namely, parties to the mechanism for imposing disgorgement; disgorgement filing mechanism; sanctions in disgorgement; disgorgement fund sources; provider of fundholding accounts; mechanism for calculating disgorgement imposition; disgorgement fund distribution mechanism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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6. The analysis of large-scale turbulence characteristics in the Indonesian seas derived from a regional model based on the Princeton Ocean Model.
- Author
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O'Driscoll, K. and Kamenkovich, V.
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TURBULENCE ,COMPARATIVE studies ,OCEAN circulation ,OCEAN surface topography ,SIMULATION methods & models - Abstract
The analysis is presented of the distribution of deep ocean turbulence characteristics on the horizontal scale of order 100 km in the vicinity of the Lifamatola Sill, from the Southern Maluku Sea (north of the sill) to the Seram Sea (south of the sill). The turbu- 5 lence characteristics were calculated with a regional model of the Indonesian seas circulation based on the Princeton Ocean Model (POM), incorporating the Mellor-Yamada turbulence closure scheme. The analysis has been carried out for the entire Indonesian seas region, including areas around important topographic features, such as the Lifamatola Sill, the North Sangihe Ridge, the Dewakang Sill and the North and South 10 Halmahera Sea Sills. To illustrate results of application of the Mellor-Yamada closure scheme we have focused on the description of features of turbulence characteristics across the Lifamatola Sill because dynamically this region is very important and some estimates of mixing coefficients in this area are available. As is well known, the POM model output provides both dynamical (depth-integrated and 3-D velocities, temper15 ature, salinity, and sea-surface-height) and turbulence characteristics (kinetic energy and master scale of turbulence, mixing coefficients of momentum, temperature and salinity, etc.). As a rule, the analysis of POM modeling results has been restricted to the study of corresponding dynamical characteristics, however the study of turbulence characteristics is essential to understanding the dynamics of the ocean circulation as 20 well. Due to the absence of direct measurements of turbulence characteristics in the analyzed area, we argued the validity of the simulated characteristics in the light of their compatibility with some general principles. Thus, along these lines, vertical profiles of across-the-sill velocities, twice the kinetic energy of turbulence, turbulence length scale, the separate terms in the equation of kinetic energy of turbulence, the Richardson num25 ber, and finally coefficients of mixing of momentum and temperature and salinity are discussed. Average values of the vertical mixing coefficient compare well with indirect estimates previously made from diagnostic calculations based on Munk's model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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7. Strengthening integrity by building integrated systems: a comparative case study of Indonesia and the Philippines.
- Author
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Kusumawardhani, Nidia Putri and Diokno, Jenny Puno
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CUSTOMS administration ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CORRUPTION ,MUNICIPAL services - Abstract
This paper outlines the strategies that the Indonesian Directorate General of Customs and Excise and the Philippines’ Bureau of Customs have employed to combat corruption in their respective administrations. These strategies have enabled both countries to improve internal procedures, strengthen integrity within their organisations, curb corruption and promote good governance. These systems provide a more transparent service to the transacting public and limit face-to-face interactions between traders and customs officers, thus minimising opportunities for corruption. This paper also outlines measures undertaken by both customs administrations to enhance integrity and ensure public accountability for customs officers who fail to faithfully discharge their duties and responsibilities. Both customs administrations have adopted systems that enable more effective operations and better supervision over customs officers and other involved parties, ultimately enhancing efficiency and improving public trust. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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8. Monetary penalties for refusal of mandatory Covid-19 vaccination: state's right to regulate vs people's rights and freedom in health care.
- Author
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Sefriani, Sefriani and Mahardhika, Nur Gemilang
- Subjects
VACCINATION policies ,MEDICAL protocols ,CONTROL (Psychology) ,QUALITATIVE research ,VACCINE refusal ,HEALTH policy ,HEALTH insurance ,COVID-19 vaccines ,HUMAN rights ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,HARM reduction ,RESEARCH methodology ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,VACCINE hesitancy ,LIBERTY ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PUBLIC health ,GOVERNMENT regulation - Abstract
Purpose: The Covid-19 pandemic has persisted for almost three years. States have since then enforced laws, policies and measures believed to be the most effective to handle the global pandemic. Along this line, the Indonesian Government opted to implement mandatory vaccination and refusal of which entails monetary penalties. Hence, this study aims to analyze two legal issues that touch upon the realm of International Human Rights Law: first, whether state has the authority to implement the said mandatory vaccine program to those who refuse to be vaccinated, and second, how is the more appropriate legal policy to obligate vaccination but without coercive sanction. Design/methodology/approach: This is a normative legal research that uses a qualitative method with case studies, conceptual, historical and comparative approaches. A descriptive-analytical deduction process was used in analyzing the issue. Findings: The results present, as part of state's right to regulate, it has the authority to enact mandatory vaccination with monetary penalties to fulfil its obligation to protect public health in times of emergency; this is legal and constitutional but only if it satisfies the requirements under the International Human Rights Law: public health necessity, reasonableness, proportionality and harm avoidance. Alternatively, herd immunity is achievable without deploying unnecessary coercive sanctions, such as improving public channels of communication and information, adopting legal policies that incentivize people's compliance like exclusion from public services, subsidies revocation, employment restrictions, higher health insurance premiums, etc. Research limitations/implications: This study analyzes in depth the following issues: of whether the government has the authority to apply mandatory vaccination laws enforced through monetary penalties for those who refused to be vaccinated and how does the government implement the appropriate legal policy to enforce mandatory vaccination without imposing penalties for non-compliance while maintaining a balance between the interests of protecting public health and the human rights of individuals to choose medical treatment for themselves, including whether they are willing to be vaccinated. Hence, the political affairs, economic matters and other non-legal related issues are excluded from this study. Originality/value: This paper hence offers a suggestive insight for state in formulating a policy relating to the mandatory vaccination program. Although the monetary penalties do not directly violate the rule of law, a more non-coercive approach to the society would be more favorable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. Discourse on online transportation regulation under Posner's theory: a comparative analysis in Indonesia and Brazil.
- Author
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Hermawan, Sapto and Surya Kusuma, Febrian Indar
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TRANSPORTATION policy ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COMPARATIVE method ,INTERNATIONAL business enterprises ,LEGAL literature ,CORPORATE giving - Abstract
Copyright of Revista de Direito Internacional is the property of Revista de Direito Internacional and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
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10. Comparative Analysis of Chinese and Indonesian State-Owned Enterprise Reform.
- Author
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Amurwanti, Dayu Nirma, Arnakim, Lili Yulyadi, Affandi, Roseno Aji, and Yi Ying
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COMPARATIVE studies ,GOVERNMENT business enterprises ,ECONOMIC development ,FINANCIAL management - Abstract
Numerous research has pointed to the significant roles of State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) in driving economic growth in Asia, particularly in the 1980s. Such enterprises have immensely benefited from both state support and legal and natural monopolies, often at the expense of crowding out private sector growth and investment. The 1997-1998 Asian Financial Crisis, however, have exposed many countries to the fact that it can no longer rely solely on SOEs. There has been pressure to reform its SOEs, to improve its competitiveness or even privatize. SOE Reform in China and Indonesia provide interesting case studies, considering their dominance in key sectors, and extent and scope of state influence. SOEs in both countries remain obliged, to this day, to deliver political and social objectives while expected to generate profits. This paper, therefore, aims at performing a comparative analysis of SOE reform in both countries during the period of 2010-2020, with a view of examining governance and financial management changes as consequences and products of reform. Questions to be answered in this paper include: 1) what considerations for reform are; 2) how SOE governance change as consequence of reform; and 3) extent of financial management and operational changes that SOEs experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
11. Financial health of Syariah and non-Syariah banks: a comparative analysis.
- Author
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Heniwati, Elok, Yantiana, Nella, and Desyana, Gita
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ISLAMIC law ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CHECKS ,PANEL analysis ,FINANCE ,CORPORATE finance ,BANK assets - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to investigate whether Syariah banks are more financially stable than non-Syariah banks and check the differential impact of explanatory variables in financial health and efficiency in the context of Indonesia. Design/methodology/approach: By using unbalanced panel data from Bankfocus over the period 2011–2018, regression analysis is performed with two response variables representing financial health, ZSCORE for return on average assets, liquid asset to deposit and short-term funding ratio. A number of control variables are used as tools to confirm the hypotheses. To check the robustness of the findings, a model with different specifications has been used. Findings: The results indicate that while Syariah banks present higher insolvency risk (less health) for long-term activity, the opposite is true for short-term activity. Other findings show that Syariah and non-Syariah banks contribute differently to the national system of financial stability owing to varying influential factors on the bank's health. Originality/value: This paper presents a comparative analysis between the financial stability of Syariah banks and that of non-Syariah banks in Indonesia by building an empirical framework that allows the author to examine the differential effects of each underlying feature on financial stability in Syariah and non-Syariah banks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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12. Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA): Multi-Variables and Small Samples Research Approach (Case Study: Indonesia's Megaprojects).
- Author
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Damayanti, Retno Wulan, Hartono, Budi, and Wijaya, Andi Rahadiyan
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COMPARATIVE studies ,CASE studies ,LITERATURE studies - Abstract
This paper aims to provide an overview of what a Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA) method is, its differences with the classical methods, the principles, and the QCA types. Literature studies and Indonesia megaproject case study is used to explain the concept of the QCA method. A comprehensive discussion of this paper produces a concise description of the QCA method that has the potential to be used to study multivariable research with small sample size. This study also succeeded in formulating a framework that can be used as a guide for researchers in determining when to use the QCA method. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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13. LEGAL PROTECTION FOR MINORITY SHAREHOLDERS ARISING FROM THE DELISTING OF ISSUER SHARES (A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF INDONESIAN, UNITED STATES, AND SINGAPORE LAW).
- Author
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Ningsih, Hilda Kurnia and Adam, Richard C.
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MINORITY stockholders ,LISTING of securities ,CAPITAL market ,LEGAL research ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
This research paper provides a comparative analysis of the legal frameworks governing the delisting of issuer shares in Indonesia, the United States, and Singapore. Using a normative legal research approach, supplemented by interviews with members of the Financial Services Authority (OJK) and a Member of the House of Representatives Commission XI, the study explores how each jurisdiction addresses the delisting process, particularly focusing on the protection of minority shareholders . The analysis reveals that Indonesia's legal system, influenced by its Civil Law heritage, contrasts with the Common Law approaches of the US and Singapore, especially in terms of shareholder involvement in voluntary delisting and the specificity of conditions for forced delisting. The study suggests enhancements to the Indonesian framework, such as clearer guidelines for shareholder approval in delisting decisions and more transparent criteria for forced delisting. These recommendations aim to improve the protection of minority shareholders within Indonesia's Capital Market. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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14. Exploring Final Project Trends Utilizing Nuclear Knowledge Taxonomy.
- Author
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Santosa, Faizhal Arif
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NUCLEAR energy -- Economic aspects ,RESEARCH evaluation ,ACADEMIC libraries ,DOCUMENTATION ,ACADEMIC achievement ,COMPARATIVE studies ,STUDENTS ,DATA analysis software ,STATISTICAL models ,DATA mining - Abstract
The National Nuclear Energy Agency of Indonesia (BATAN) taxonomy is a nuclear competence field organized into six categories. The Polytechnic Institute of Nuclear Technology, as an institution of nuclear education, faces a challenge in organizing student publications according to the fields in the BATAN taxonomy, especially in the library. The goal of this research is to determine the most efficient automatic document classification model using text mining to categorize student final project documents in Indonesian and monitor the development of the nuclear field in each category. The kNN algorithm is used to classify documents and identify the best model by comparing Cosine Similarity, Correlation Similarity, and Dice Similarity, along with vector creation binary term occurrence and TF-IDF. A total of 99 documents labeled as reference data were obtained from the BATAN repository, and 536 unlabeled final project documents were prepared for prediction. In this study, several text mining approaches such as stem, stop words filter, n-grams, and filter by length were utilized. The number of k is 4, with Cosine-binary being the best model with an accuracy value of 97 percent, and kNN works optimally when working with binary term occurrence in Indonesian language documents when compared to TF-IDF. Engineering of Nuclear Devices and Facilities is the most popular field among students, while Management is the least preferred. However, Isotopes and Radiation are the most prominent fields in Nuclear Technochemistry. Text mining can assist librarians in grouping documents based on specific criteria. There is also the possibility of observing the evolution of each existing category based on the increase of documents and the application of similar methods in various circumstances. Because of the curriculum and courses given, the growth of each discipline of nuclear science in the study program is different and varied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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15. Using storylines for bilingual dissemination of a grounded theory.
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Ligita, Titan, Francis, Karen, Wicking, Kristin, Harvey, Nichole, and Nurjannah, Intansari
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COMPARATIVE studies ,DIABETES ,GROUNDED theory ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MULTILINGUALISM ,PATIENT education ,STATISTICAL sampling ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Background: A storyline in a grounded theory study plays two important roles: an analytical tool and a research product. Using more than one language in a study affects the research, including the dissemination of its findings. Very little literature discusses how to develop and disseminate a storyline. Aim: This paper offers insight into the crafting of a storyline to disseminate a grounded theory study describing how people in Indonesia with diabetes learn about their disease. Discussion: This paper explains how the researchers developed the storyline. The authors then address considerations in the storyline's development and explain how they disseminated it, as well as the factors that influenced that dissemination. Conclusion: Disseminating findings through a storyline written in the local language ensures that the target audience all have access to a study's outcomes through an easily readable publication. Implication for practice: Sharing a storyline helps to disseminate the outcomes of a grounded theory study. It informs the wider community of new knowledge and enables it to review, understand and apply the outcomes of research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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16. Comparative Analysis of Combustion and Electric Motorcycle as an Alternative Online-Based Transportation in Indonesia.
- Author
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Onggaria, Eileen, Marhaendra, Fajar, Nur Pratama, Ilham, Manurung, Olivia Elisabeth, Nurdini, Arief, and Nurcahyo, Rahmat
- Subjects
COMPARATIVE studies ,COMBUSTION ,ELECTRIC motorcycles ,TRANSPORTATION - Abstract
Due to demand for Indonesia to minimize pollution effect from transportation modes, the use of electric vehicle especially electric motorcycle is expected to reduce pollution to the environment in operational of online based transportation. For this reason, online based transportation needs information about how the electric motorcycle will reduce emissions and the impact on operational activity related to cost, quality and maintenance. This paper shows that relative to conventional motorcycles, electric motorcycles have more capital and operational cost than the conventional motorcycle, but electric motorcycle has better values on specification, energy consume, energy cost, carbon emission, purchase cost, and tax that give benefit to online-based transportation to accelerate the use of electric motorcycle in online-based transportation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
17. COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF OVERLAY THICKNESS USING THE ASPHALT INSTITUTE'S AND MEPDG WITH KENLAYER.
- Author
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Wasanta, Tilaka, Subagio, Bambang Sugeng, Wibowo, Sony Sulaksono, and Hariyadi, Eri Susanto
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ASPHALT ,FLEXIBLE pavements ,STRAINS & stresses (Mechanics) ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PAVEMENTS - Abstract
The Mechanistic-Empirical Pavement Design Guide (MEPDG) is widely regarded as the current state of the art in mechanistic-empirical pavement analysis and design. The guide offers a comprehensive set of procedures for determining overlay thickness, a crucial aspect of pavement design. The objective of this study is to investigate the differences that arise when designing overlay thickness using two distinct methods: the Asphalt Institute's mechanistic-empirical and the MEPDG. This study utilized KENLAYER software, which enables stress and strain analysis by modeling the nonlinear elastic pavement structure. Accordingly, the Asphalt Institute method solely relies on alligator cracking and rut depth as its failure indicators, while the MEPDG encompasses several additional criteria that serve as determinants for evaluating the performance of pavement structure. The subject of this study is flexible pavement situated on a road located in West Java, Indonesia. Following this, a falling weight deflectometer (FWD) test was conducted to obtain the deflection characteristics of the road. This paper provides a detailed explanation of overlay thickness calculation processes employed in both the Asphalt Institute's mechanistic-empirical and the MEPDG method. The Asphalt Institute Method resulted in a slightly thicker overlay of 30 cm, while the MEPDG method produced a thickness of 25 cm. To adapt and apply MEPDG effectively in Indonesia, adaptations such as employing Weigh-In-Motion data for load spectra and conducting local calibration are necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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18. Curriculum a comparative study of LSTM, GRU, and Conv-LSTM network model in forecasting COVID-19 new cases in Indonesia.
- Author
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Marcellina, Jesslyn and Rosadi, Dedi
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 pandemic , *VIRAL transmission , *COVID-19 , *COMPARATIVE studies , *FORECASTING , *DEEP learning - Abstract
Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) pandemic has emerged as one of the biggest challenge faced by researchers, especially in public health system. Since the virus spread and mutates quickly, strategies are needed so that the public health system doesn't collapse due to overcapacity. Modeling and forecasting accurately the COVID-19 daily new cases is very important to understand and help carry out risk management for the outbreak control. To obtain the estimation of the Indonesian daily cases of COVID-19 based on daily confirmed cases, we present a comparative study between three deep learning methods in this paper: Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM), Gated Recurrent Unit (GRU), and Convolutional Long Short-Term Memory (Conv-LSTM). The data used is daily confirmed cases from September 1st to September 7th, 2021. The result is Conv-LSTM model produces better performance than other methods. Here we also provide 7 day out-of-sample forecast for daily cases from September 1st to September 7th, 2021 using each model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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19. The experiences of merging health insurance funds in South Korea, Turkey, Thailand, and Indonesia: a cross-country comparative study.
- Author
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Bazyar, Mohammad, Yazdi-Feyzabadi, Vahid, Rashidian, Arash, and Behzadi, Anahita
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HEALTH services accessibility ,PUBLIC health ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH insurance ,GOVERNMENT aid ,JUDGMENT sampling - Abstract
Background: Fragmentation in health insurance system may lead to inequity in financial access to and utilization of health care services. One possible option to overcome this challenge is merging the existing health insurance funds together. This article aims to review and compare the experience of South Korea, Turkey, Thailand and Indonesia regarding merging their health insurance funds. Methods: This was a cross-country comparative study. The countries of the study were selected purposefully based on the availability of data to review their experience regarding merging health insurance funds. To find the most relevant documents about the subject, different sources of information including books, scientific papers, dissertations, reports, and policy documents were studied. Research databases including PubMed, Scopus, Google Scholar, Science Direct and ProQuest were used to find relevant articles. Documents released by international organizations such as WHO and World Bank were analyzed as well. The content of documents was analyzed using a data-driven conventional content analysis approach and all details regarding the subject were extracted. The extracted information was reviewed by all authors several times and nine themes emerged. Results: The findings show that improving equity in health financing and access to health care services among different groups of population was one of the main triggers to merge health insurance funds. Resistance by groups enjoying better benefit package and concerns of workers and employers about increasing the contribution rates were among challenges ahead of merging health insurance funds. Improving equity in the health care financing; reducing inequity in access to and utilization of health care services; boosting risk pooling; reducing administrative costs; higher chance to control total health care expenditures; and enhancing strategic purchasing were the main advantages of merging health insurance funds. The experience of these countries also emphasizes that political commitment and experiencing a reliable economic growth to enhance benefit package and support the single national insurance scheme financially after merging are required to facilitate implementation of merging health insurance funds. Conclusions: Other contributing health reforms should be implemented simultaneously or sequentially in both supply side and demand side of the health system if merging is going to pave the way reaching universal health coverage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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20. Impacts of The COVID-19 Pandemic On First-Generation, Low-Income And Rural Students In Indonesia And Vietnam: A Cross-Cultural Comparative Study.
- Author
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Djita, Rian R., Tran, Bich Thi Ngoc, Nguyen, Nguyet Thi Minh, and Wibawanta, Budi
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COVID-19 pandemic ,LOW-income students ,LOW-income countries ,CROSS-cultural studies ,FINANCIAL stress ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Comparative studies around the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic are still limited. This paper explores the question: how has the COVID-19 pandemic affected higher education students, and which ones have been most impacted? Indonesia and Vietnam are our focus. We leveraged a rich set of data collected online from both countries (n = 2600). We used regression analyses to measure students' wellbeing, financial hardships, access to technology, and educational satisfaction. As expected, we found statistically significant differences between both countries except for the wellbeing domain. For within-country comparison, consistent for both countries, low-income students were less likely to access technology and were more likely to experience financial distress than their counterparts. Indonesian first-gen students also showed a similar trend. Lastly, we observed a lower likelihood of satisfaction from rural and low-income students in Indonesia for their education during the pandemic. We provide our policy recommendations for both countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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21. Climate Finance Effectiveness: A Comparative Analysis of Geothermal Development in Indonesia and the Philippines.
- Author
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Chelminski, Kathryn
- Subjects
GEOTHERMAL resources ,PARIS Agreement (2016) ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,ENERGY development ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
In light of commitments made under the UNFCCC Paris Agreement and Glasgow Climate Pact, trillions of dollars are needed to fund climate mitigation and adaptation in developing countries. However, few studies have investigated the effectiveness of climate finance or how it impacts barriers to renewable energy development in recipient countries. This article contributes to the literature by investigating climate finance effectiveness through comparative case study analysis of its impacts on geothermal development in Indonesia and the Philippines. The article finds that three mechanisms of climate finance—utility modifier, social learning and capacity building—work interdependently in impacting the financial, regulatory, and technical barriers to geothermal development in Indonesia and the Philippines but are individually insufficient to scale the industry; political will and energy shocks play a significant intervening role. This paper raises policy implications for climate finance effectiveness and renewable energy technology deployment in developing countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Do Islamic banks need to earn extra profits?: A comparative analysis on banking sector rent in Bangladesh and Indonesia.
- Author
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Suzuki, Yasushi, Uddin, S.M. Sohrab, and Sigit, Pramono
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ISLAMIC finance ,ASSET backed financing ,CREDIT risk ,COMPARATIVE studies ,MUSLIM scholars - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to draw upon existing debate over "financial sector rent" (bank rent) to analyze the current pattern of financing of Bangladeshi and Indonesian Islamic banks during the period of 2011 and 2015. Design/methodology/approach: The empirical evidence through a comparative approach of analyzing the performance of Islamic banks with that of conventional banks in respective countries – two of the largest countries where majority of the population are Muslims – is drawn to demonstrate the objective. Findings: While Islamic banks in Bangladesh are primarily concentrating on the murabaha (mark-up contract) mode of financing, some transactions under musharaka (partnership/equity-based contract) are observed in the Indonesian Islamic banking sector. This anomaly in Indonesia can be explained by the nature of their musharaka financing which is not of the purely "participatory" financing type. As a result, we can observe the quasi-murabaha syndrome in Indonesian Islamic banking sector. The concentration of asset-based financing including consumers' financing (hire purchase) in the credit portfolio gives Islamic banks relatively higher Islamic bank rent opportunity for protecting their "franchise value" as Sharīʿah-compliant (Islamic law-compliant) lenders. However, Indonesian Islamic banks share a still infant Islamic banking market, and enjoy less rent opportunity under a severe competition with conventional banks. Research limitations/implications: The bank rent approach suggests that the syndrome observed both in Bangladesh and Indonesia can be ironically justifiable. Moreover, the mode of profit-and-loss sharing provides, in practice, an idea of the difficulty in managing the participatory financing embedded with high credit risk. Under this scenario, it is necessary for Islamic scholars and the regulatory authority to design an appropriate financial architecture, enabling Islamic banks to avail the benefit from a wider variety of Sharīʿah-based Islamic financing. Originality/value: This paper expands the newly emerged concept of "Islamic bank rent" to make sense of the murabaha syndrome in Bangladesh and the quasi-murabaha syndrome in Indonesia. This approach also contributes to clarifying the unique risk and cost to be compensated with the spreads that Islamic banks are expected to earn. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
23. Relieving or aggravating the burden: Non-communicable diseases of dual users of electronic and conventional cigarette in Indonesia.
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Moeis, Faizal R., Hartono, Risky K., Nurhasana, Renny, Satrya, Aryana, and Dartanto, Teguh
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NON-communicable diseases ,HYPERTENSION ,ELECTRONIC cigarettes ,SMOKING cessation ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,ASTHMA ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,SAMPLE size (Statistics) ,CROSS-sectional method ,DIABETES ,COMPARATIVE studies ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,TOBACCO products ,SECONDARY analysis ,COMORBIDITY ,LIVER failure - Abstract
INTRODUCTION Conventional (tobacco) and e-cigarette smoking prevalence is a growing concern in Indonesia. It has worsened as e-cigarettes complement conventional cigarettes, resulting in dual users, potentially causing an additional burden in terms of health. METHODS Our study is a secondary data analysis of the 2018 National Basic Health (Riskesdas) Survey. The sample is limited to respondents aged 15--64 years who either only used e-cigarettes (e-cigarette single users), only used conventional cigarettes (conventional cigarette single users) or used both e-cigarettes and conventional cigarettes (dual users) in the last month. The sample size of the data was 174917 individuals. Our analysis utilized the logit and negative binomial regression to test whether the type of smoking behavior was associated with reporting to have a non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and multimorbidity, respectively. RESULTS We found that: 1) dual users are positively associated to report having NCDs, such as liver failure (AOR=2.38; 95% CI: 2.32--2.44), diabetes (AOR=1.53; 95% CI: 1.50--1.57), hypertension (AOR=1.49; 95% CI: 1.48--1.51), and gum diseases (AOR=1.74; 95% CI: 1.73--1.74) compared to single users; and 2) e-cigarette single users are positively associated with reporting to have NCDs such as asthma (AOR=3.11; 95% CI: 3.01--3.22) and diabetes (AOR=16.01; 95% CI: 14.57--17.59), and dental problems such as broken teeth (AOR=1.04; 95% CI: 1.03--1.06), and they have disease multimorbidity compared to conventional cigarette single users. CONCLUSIONS Simultaneous control of the consumption of e-cigarettes and conventional cigarettes is essential. In addition, it is important to promote policies to increase the price of e-cigarettes and conventional cigarettes to reduce smoking prevalence and prevent dual users. Moreover, as there are negative health consequences for conventional and e-cigarette single users or dual users, the most effective alternative is to stop smoking, not switching products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
24. Knowledge and Attitude of Community Nurses on Pressure Injury Prevention: A Cross‐sectional Study in an Indonesian City.
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Sari, Sheizi Prista, Everink, Irma HJ, Amir, Yufitriana, Lohrmann, Christa, Halfens, Ruud JG, Moore, Zena, Beeckman, Dimitri, and Schols, Jos MGA
- Subjects
NURSING audit ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,NURSES' attitudes ,PRESSURE ulcers ,CROSS-sectional method ,COMMUNITY health services ,ATTITUDES toward illness ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HOSPITAL nursing staff ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,NURSES ,THEMATIC analysis ,COMMUNITY health nursing ,WOUND care ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
The objectives of this study were to examine the knowledge and attitude of Indonesian community nurses regarding Pressure Injury (PI) prevention. A cross‐sectional design was used and included the community nurses permanently working in the Public Health Center (Puskemas) in Bandung, West Java Indonesia. Knowledge was measured using the Pressure Ulcer Knowledge Assessment Tool (PUKAT 2.0). Attitudes were measured using a predesigned instrument which included 11 statements on a five point Likert scale. All data were collected using paper‐based questionnaires. The response rate was 100%. Respondents (n = 235) consisted of 80 community nursing program coordinators (34.0%) and 155 community nurses (66.0%). Regarding knowledge, the percentage of correct answers in the total group of community nurses on the PUKAT 2.0 was 30.7%. The theme "Prevention" had the lowest percentage of correct answers (20.8%). Community nurses who had additional PI or wound care training had a higher knowledge score compared with community nurses who did not have additional PI training (33.7% vs 30.3%; Z = −1.995; P = 0.046). The median attitude score was 44 (maximum score 55; range 28–55), demonstrating a positive attitude among participants towards PI prevention. Further, the higher the education status of participants, the more positive the attitudes (H = 11.773; P = 0.003). This study shows that community nurses need to improve their basic knowledge of PI prevention. Furthermore, research should be performed to explore what community nurses need to strengthen their role in PI prevention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
25. A Comparison of Democratic Transformations of Tunisia and Indonesia: Lessons Learned.
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ZGURIĆ, BORNA
- Subjects
- *
DEPENDENT variables , *SYSTEMS design , *INDEPENDENT variables , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ISLAMISTS - Abstract
The question this paper tries to provide an answer to is, why democratic transformation was successful in Tunisia and Indonesia? The theoretical approach is primarily rooted in descriptive-empirical actor theories, although cultural theories were used as well, as to better understand the political ideas and stances of Islamist actors. The research strategy is a binary comparative study with the same outcome on the dependent variable. Furthermore, the paper utilizes the Most Different Systems Design (MDSD) since both countries are quite different, but the dependent variable is the same – democratic transformation was successful. The aim of the paper is to isolate the independent variables which should be considered as the necessary prerequisites for the democratic transformation in both cases. However, the paper emphasises that further testing and more cases are needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Resourcing for post-disaster reconstruction: a comparative study of Indonesia and China.
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Chang, Yan, Wilkinson, Suzanne, Potangaroa, Regan, and Seville, Erica
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EMERGENCY management ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESOURCE availability (Ecology) ,PROJECT management - Abstract
Purpose – There is a need to understand resourcing issues when reconstructing the built environment in a post-disaster situation. The purpose of this paper is to determine the resourcing difficulties that are likely to face the international practitioners in post-disaster reconstruction by identifying and comparing the factors that affected resource availability following natural disasters in Indonesia and China respectively. Design/methodology/approach – The research methodology included field-based questionnaire surveys, semi-structured interviews and observations. A comparative analysis was used to extract similarities and differences with regard to resourcing approaches in Indonesia and China. Findings – Despite the different resourcing approaches adopted in Indonesia and China in their recovery from large-scale disasters, there are common issues facing post-disaster reconstruction stakeholders, including competence of the implementing agencies, capacity of transportation, governance and legislation, and market conditions. Specifically, community-related housing features played a dominant role in donor-driven resourcing practice in post-Indian Ocean tsunami reconstruction in Indonesia, whereas factors related to project control and management primarily contributed to resourcing performance of Chinese reconstruction specialists following the Wenchuan earthquake. Research limitations/implications – To solve resourcing problems, countries need to create an enabling environment and build institutional capacity. The cross-cultural comparative analysis encourages policy makers and practitioners to exchange experiences from recent recovery operations. Originality/value – The paper illustrates the infrastructural and institutional weaknesses that hindered effective resource procurement during post-disaster reconstruction in Indonesia and China. The research findings show common areas in need of improvement in other disaster prone countries, along with the issues to be addressed in the donor-led or contractor-led resourcing practice in the two studied countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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27. Co-locating art and health: engaging civil society to create an enabling environment to respond to HIV in Indonesia.
- Author
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Newland, Jamee, Lestari, Dwi, Poedjanadi, Mashoeroel Noor, and Kelly-Hanku, Angela
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SEXUAL health ,REPRODUCTIVE health services ,CIVIL society ,HEALTH information services ,HIV ,HIV prevention ,MEDICAL communication ,RESEARCH ,HUMAN sexuality ,RESEARCH methodology ,SOCIAL stigma ,MEDICAL cooperation ,EVALUATION research ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Background This paper will report on the successful co-location of a community-based arts and sexual health project that aimed to engage, educate and create testing, treatment and care pathways at a co-located mobile sexual health clinic and community-controlled art gallery in Yogyakarta, Indonesia.
Methods: Mixed methods were used to evaluate the project, including a visitor (n = 1181) and artist (n = 85) log book, a convenience audience survey (n = 231), and qualitative semi-structured interviews (n = 13) with artists and audience to explore the effect of arts-based activities on access to sexual health information and services, and stigma and discrimination.Results: In total, 85 artists curated five separate exhibitions that were attended by 1181 people, of which 62% were aged ≤24 years. Gallery attendance improved awareness and participatory and interactive engagement with sexual health information through a medium described as interesting, fun, cool, and unique. The co-located clinic facilitated informal pathways to sexual health services, including HIV/AIDS testing, treatment, and care. Importantly, the project created shared understandings and empathy that challenged stereotypes and myths, reducing stigmatising beliefs and practices.Conclusions: Arts-based programs are transformative and can be effectively implemented, replicated and scaled up in low-resource settings to create awareness and initiate for HIV prevention, testing, treatment, and care. Art-based health programs engages people in their communities, mobilises civil society, builds enabling environments to reduce stigma and discrimination and improves access to testing and prevention; essential features needed to end AIDS in Indonesia (and the Southeast Asia region) while improving the lives of those most vulnerable to infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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28. Transnational Peace Building and Conflict: Lessons from Aceh, Indonesia, and Sri Lanka.
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RAJASINGHAM-SENANAYAKE, Darini
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PEACEBUILDING ,INTERNATIONAL mediation ,NATION building ,COMPARATIVE studies ,ETHNOGRAPHIC analysis - Abstract
Global attention generated after the December 2004 Asia tsunami disaster catalyzed one of the most successful internationally-mediated peace processes in the world in Aceh, Indonesia, but did not save the peace process in Sri Lanka. Rather, international aid contributed to a "no war, no peace" equilibrium in Sri Lanka that was brought to an end by the military victory of the government. This paper compares these two highly internationalized peace processes in Southeast and South Asia, particularly, the role of international actors in reconstruction, and analyses the reasons for the different outcomes. Based on ethnographic fieldwork, the paper traces how transnational aid networks, discourses and practices may become endogenous in local or internal conflicts and peace dynamics over time. Finally, it is clear that inclusive and comprehensive peace building, as well as the space for transformation of conflicting groups, is the key to successful peace building. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
29. Comparative Analysis of Safety Climate in the Chinese, Australian, and Indonesian Construction Industries.
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Loosemore, Martin, Sunindijo, Riza Yosia, and Zhang, Shang
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DEVELOPING countries ,MORAL relativism ,CONSTRUCTION industry ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Poor safety is a perennial problem for the construction industry worldwide. The concept of safety climate has been strongly linked to safety performance, yet inconsistent methodologies make international comparisons problematic. In addressing this gap in research, a comparative safety climate survey of 515 construction operatives and managers in Australia, Indonesia, and China is presented using a standardized tool. The results highlight interesting similarities and differences between safety climate in each country and question taken–for–granted assumptions that safety climate in countries with relatively mature regulatory structures like Australia are more positive than in less developed countries like Indonesia and China. Results also highlight the intermediating effects of factors such as management commitment and cultural differences in shaping safety climate. Highlighting the potential value of theories of new institutionalism and cultural and ethical relativism, the paper concludes by raising important new practical, theoretical, and methodological questions about the merits and challenges of making international comparisons of safety climate, even when using standardized measurement tools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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30. THE COST OF SMS REMINDER TO IMPROVE ARV ADHERENCE AMONG KEY POPULATIONS.
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Juwita, Mery Nurma, Hardiawan, Donny, Prawinegara, Rozar, Handayani, Miasari, Wisaksana, Rudi, Januraga, Pande Putu, Sulaiman, Nurjannah, and Siregar, Adiatma
- Subjects
HIV infection risk factors ,CLINICAL drug trials ,PATIENT compliance ,RISK assessment ,SEX work ,SELF-evaluation ,HUMAN services programs ,RESEARCH funding ,COST analysis ,PRIMARY health care ,HUMAN sexuality ,MEDICAL care ,COST benefit analysis ,EVALUATION of medical care ,HIV infections ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ANTIVIRAL agents ,SEX customs ,HEALTH care reminder systems ,TEXT messages ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,COMPARATIVE studies ,MEDICAL care costs ,HOSPITAL wards - Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
31. Comparative analysis of deep learning models for detecting face mask.
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Ramadhan, M. Vickya, Muchtar, Kahlil, Nurdin, Yudha, Oktiana, Maulisa, Fitria, Maya, Maulina, Novi, Elwirehardja, Gregorius Natanael, and Pardamean, Bens
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MEDICAL masks ,DEEP learning ,COMPUTER vision ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CORONAVIRUSES ,ACTIVITIES of daily living - Abstract
The spread of Corona Virus Disease 19 (COVID-19) in Indonesia is still relatively high and has not shown a significant decrease. One of the main reasons is due to the lack of supervision on the implementation of health protocols such as wearing masks in daily activities. Recently, state-of-the-art algorithms were introduced to automate face mask detection. To be more specific, the researchers developed various kinds of architectures for the detection of masks based on computer vision methods. This paper aims to evaluate well-known architectures, namely the ResNet50, VGG11, InceptionV3, EfficientNetB4, and YOLO (You Only Look Once) to recommend the best approach in this specific field. By using the MaskedFace-Net dataset, the experimental results showed that the EfficientNetB4 architecture has better accuracy at 95.77% compared to the YOLOv4 architecture of 93.40%, InceptionV3 of 87.30%, YOLOv3 of 86.35%, ResNet50 of 84.41%, VGG11 of 84.38%, and YOLOv2 of 78.75%, respectively. It should be noted that particularly for YOLO, the model was trained using a collection of MaskedFace-Net images that had been pre-processed and labelled for the task. The model was initially able to train faster with pre-trained weights from the COCO dataset thanks to transfer learning, resulting in a robust set of features expected for face mask detection and classification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Modified Pathway to Survival highlights importance of rapid access to quality institutional delivery care to decrease neonatal mortality in Serang and Jember districts, Java, Indonesia.
- Author
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Kalter, Henry D., Setel, Philip W., Deviany, Poppy E., Nugraheni, Sri A., Sumarmi, Sri, Weaver, Emily H., Latief, Kamaluddin, Rianty, Tika, Nandiaty, Fitri, Anggondowati, Trisari, and Achadi, Endang L.
- Subjects
MEDICAL quality control ,MIDDLE-income countries ,HEALTH facilities ,HEALTH services accessibility ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,CROSS-sectional method ,AUTOPSY ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,RISK assessment ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PERINATAL death ,LOW-income countries ,PREGNANCY complications ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INFANT mortality ,DELIVERY (Obstetrics) ,ODDS ratio ,LABOR complications (Obstetrics) - Abstract
Background Three-quarters of births in Indonesia occur in a health facility, yet the neonatal mortality rate remains high at 15 per 1000 live births. The Pathway to Survival (P-to-S) framework of steps needed to return sick neonates and young children to health focuses on caregiver recognition of and care-seeking for severe illness. In view of increased institutional delivery in Indonesia and other low- and middle-income countries, a modified P-to-S is needed to assess the role of maternal complications in neonatal survival. Methods We conducted a retrospective cross-sectional verbal and social autopsy study of all neonatal deaths from June through December 2018, identified by a proven listing method in two districts of Java, Indonesia. We examined care-seeking for maternal complications, delivery place, and place and timing of neonatal illness onset and death. Results The fatal illnesses of 189/259 (73%) neonates began in their delivery facility (DF), 114/189 (60%) of whom died before discharge. Mothers whose neonate's illness started at their delivery hospital and lower-level DF were more than six times (odds ratio (OR)=6.5; 95% confidence interval (CI)=3.4-12.5) and twice (OR=2.0; 95% CI=1.01-4.02) as likely to experience a maternal complication as those whose neonates fell fatally ill in the community, and illness started earlier (mean=0.3 vs 3.6 days; P<0.001) and death came sooner (3.5 vs 5.3 days; P=0.06) to neonates whose illness started at any DF. Despite going to the same number of providers/facilities, women with a labour and delivery (L/D) complication who sought care from at least one other provider or facility on route to their DF took longer than those without a complication to reach their DF (median= 3.3 vs 1.3 hours; P=0.01). Conclusions Neonates' fatal illness onset in their DF was strongly associated with maternal complications. Mothers with a L/D complication experienced delays in reaching their DF, and nearly half the neonatal deaths occurred in association with a complication, suggesting that mothers with complications first seeking care at a hospital providing emergency maternal and neonatal care might have prevented some deaths. A modified P-to-S highlights the importance of rapid access to quality institutional delivery care in settings where many births occur in facilities and/or there is good care-seeking for L/D complications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Comparative analysis of classification methods in determining non-active student characteristics in Indonesia Open University.
- Author
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Ratnaningsih, Dewi Juliah and Sitanggang, Imas Sukaesih
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NAIVE Bayes classification ,SEDENTARY behavior ,STUDENTS' conduct of life ,COMPARATIVE studies ,BOOTSTRAP aggregation (Algorithms) ,C4.5 (Algorithms) ,HIGHER education ,OPEN University of Indonesia (Indonesia) - Abstract
Classification is a data mining technique that aims to discover a model from training data that distinguishes records into appropriate classes. Classification methods can be applied in education, to classify non-active students in higher education programs based on their characteristics. This paper presents a comparison of three classification methods: Naïve Bayes, Bagging, and C4.5. The criteria used to evaluate performance of three classifiers are stratified cross-validation, confusion matrix, ROC curve, recall, precision, and F-measure. The data used for this paper are non-active students in Indonesia Open University (IOU) for the period of 2004–2012. The non-active students were divided into three groups: non-active students in the first three years, non-active students in first five years, and non-active students over five years. Results of the study show that the Bagging method provided a higher accuracy than Naïve Bayes and C4.5. The accuracy of bagging classification is 82.99%, while the Naïve Bayes and C4.5 are 80.04% and 82.74%, respectively. The classification tree resulted from the Bagging method has a large number of nodes, so it is quite difficult to use in decision-making. For that, the C4.5 tree is used to classify non-active students in IOU based in their characteristics. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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34. Managerial competencies of 3PL providers: A comparative analysis of Indonesian firms and multinational companies.
- Author
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Sangka, Bayu Khresna, Rahman, Shams, Yadlapalli, Aswini, and Jie, Ferry
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COLLEGE curriculum ,THIRD-party logistics ,BUSINESS communication ,COMPARATIVE studies ,INTERNATIONAL business enterprises ,ANALYTIC hierarchy process - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to identify and prioritise competencies of Indonesian third-party logistics (3PL) managers from the perspective of multinational corporations (MNCs) and local firms. Design/methodology/approach: Underlined by the theory of action and job performance (competency model), the study proposes a framework that consists of management, logistics, business and information and communication technology competency categories, with 15 competencies. Data are collected from five MNCs and five local 3PL firms operating in Indonesia. The analytic hierarchy process method is used to calculate the priority weights and to prioritise the competencies. Findings: Results indicate that both the local and MNC 3PL providers emphasise logistics as the "most important" competency category. In the "moderately important" competency group, MNCs prioritise competencies in the management competency category while local firms prioritise competencies in the business competency category. Research limitations/implications: Results obtained in this study focus on 3PL firms in Indonesian businesses, which may not be applicable to other nations and other industries. Practical implications: 3PL firms, industry peak bodies (e.g. Indonesian Logistics Association) and education providers can benefit from incorporating the findings of this study in developing curricula for higher education and training programmes for certification designed to improve managerial competencies. Originality/value: By including the perceptions of the MNCs and local 3PL providers, this study advances the literature on 3PL managerial competencies by extending such knowledge to the global environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. A COMPARATIVE PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS OF A 1 MW CIS PV SYSTEM AND A 5 KW CRYSTALLINE-SI PV SYSTEM UNDER THE TROPICAL CLIMATE OF INDONESIA.
- Author
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Kunaifi, Kun, Reinders, Angèle, Kaharudin, Dimas, Harmanto, Aripriantoni, and Mudiarto, Kirjono
- Subjects
TROPICAL climate ,COPPER indium selenide ,GYROTRONS ,ELECTRON tube grids ,SOLAR energy ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Despite being a tropical country with great potential for solar power, knowledge about the actual performance of photovoltaic (PV) systems in Indonesia remains limited. In this paper, using 5- minute resolution data from 2016 to 2018 obtained from a 1 MW Copper Indium Selenide (CIS) and a 5 kW crystalline silicon (c-Si) PV plant in West Java, we aim to answer the question of how a CIS PV plant performs and degrades in Indonesia's tropical climate and how it compares to a PV system that contains c-Si technology. The methodological approach used includes performance analyses of these PV systems according to IEC standard 61724 and an investigation of the degradation rate using NREL/RdTools. The following results were derived from the analyses: the total annual Hi was 1500 kWh/m² or around 4.2 kWh/m²/day. The daily-averaged performance ratio, PR, was 91.7% ± 4% and 87.4% ± 7% for the CIS system with string inverters and a central inverter, respectively. The mean PR of the CIS systems was 12% higher than that of the c-Si system, which was 79.8%. Concerning the final yield, Y
f , the CIS system with a mean Yf of 3.85 kWh/kWp outperformed the c-Si system by 14%. The CIS system degraded by 1.53% per year, which is less than the c-Si system with a degradation rate (Rd) of 3.72% per year. From these results, it can be concluded that, in this case, CIS technology performs better than c-Si in Indonesia's tropical climate. Uncertainties in the calculation and high values of Rd could be areas for further investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Indonesia in the Spotlight: Combating Corruption through ICT enabled Governance.
- Author
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Sabani, Alvedi, Farah, Mohamed H., and Sari Dewi, Dian Retno
- Subjects
CORRUPTION ,DEVELOPING countries ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,DIGITAL divide ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
This paper puts Indonesia in the spotlight assessing the country's ability to combat corruption through ICT enabled governance. The research firstly tries to define governance through the different lens of intergovernmental organisations. This is followed by a comparative analysis of different situational characteristics of governance in developing and developed countries. The paper then explores the role of governance in Indonesia, highlighting the existing barriers, and potential drivers to the implementation of ICT in Indonesia. It is concluded that ICT enabled good governance needs to be in place to support the eradication of corruption in Indonesia. Corruption in Indonesia is considered systematic as the practice is prevalent across public organisations in the country. This study contributes to the information systems discipline by offering new insights into the issues of implementing ICT enabled open governance in developing countries such as Indonesia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Indonesian civic engagement among college students.
- Author
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Karliani, Eli, Kartadinata, Sapriya, Winataputra, Udin S., and Komalasari, Kokom
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COLLEGE students ,COMPARATIVE studies ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SOCIAL participation ,SOCIAL skills ,STUDENT attitudes ,SURVEYS ,QUANTITATIVE research ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
This paper aims to analyze the overall picture of Indonesian civic engagement, particularly among Palangka Raya university students. Through a quantitative approach and survey method, the population and sample of the research include the students who were on their fourth (2015/2016) and second (2016/2017) semester about 2,422 students. The answers were then divided into three categories: good, moderate, and poor. As for the civic attitude and civic behavior variables, the maximum value is 5 and the minimum 1, and then the answers were divided into five categories: very high, high, moderate, low and very low. Findings reveal (i) the similarity of civic engagement in each faculty and level of the students who are on their fourth and second semester is in moderate category in terms of their knowledge based on identifying the governmental process, rights, and duties of citizens in terms of laws and politics, as well as the lecturers; (ii) the similarity of the high category of their attitude based on the values of humanity, empathy, openness, tolerance, ethics, and social responsibility; (iii) the difference of civic engagement between the second semester students who are low and the fourth semester who are high in terms of their behavior is determined by learning experience where the fourth semester students are more experienced in coping with the problems in community than the second semester counterparts. Recommendation for future research is the exploration of the reason behind the emerging unsynchronized results between the Indonesian civic knowledge, attitude, and behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Inverse scattering pre-stack depth imaging and it's comparison to some depth migration methods for imaging rich fault complex structure.
- Author
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Nurhandoko, Bagus Endar B., Sukmana, Indriani, Mubarok, Syahrul, Deny, Agus, Widowati, Sri, and Kurniadi, Rizal
- Subjects
IMAGING systems in seismology ,SEISMIC wave scattering ,COMPARATIVE studies ,WAVE equation ,SCATTERING (Physics) ,SURFACES (Technology) - Abstract
Migration is important issue for seismic imaging in complex structure. In this decade, depth imaging becomes important tools for producing accurate image in depth imaging instead of time domain imaging. The challenge of depth migration method, however, is in revealing the complex structure of subsurface. There are many methods of depth migration with their advantages and weaknesses. In this paper, we show our propose method of pre-stack depth migration based on time domain inverse scattering wave equation. Hopefully this method can be as solution for imaging complex structure in Indonesia, especially in rich thrusting fault zones. In this research, we develop a recent advance wave equation migration based on time domain inverse scattering wave which use more natural wave propagation using scattering wave. This wave equation pre-stack depth migration use time domain inverse scattering wave equation based on Helmholtz equation. To provide true amplitude recovery, an inverse of divergence procedure and recovering transmission loss are considered of pre-stack migration. Benchmarking the propose inverse scattering pre-stack depth migration with the other migration methods are also presented, i.e.: wave equation pre-stack depth migration, waveequation depth migration, and pre-stack time migration method. This inverse scattering pre-stack depth migration could image successfully the rich fault zone which consist extremely dip and resulting superior quality of seismic image. The image quality of inverse scattering migration is much better than the others migration methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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- View/download PDF
39. Institutional Strengthening for the Role of Mass Media in Disaster Risk Reduction in Japan and Indonesia: An Application of SSM-Based Action Research.
- Author
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Hardjosoekarto, Sudarsono, Yovani, Nadia, and Santiar, Lea
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ACTION research ,MASS media ,NATURAL disasters ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
This paper explores institutional strengthening for the role of mass media in disaster risk reduction, in Japan and in Indonesia. Although this research is a comparative study in nature, the ultimate goal of this exploration is to identify policy recommendations for parties concerns in disaster risk reduction in Indonesia. Soft systems methodology-based action research (Checkland and Scholes ; Uchiyama ; Hardjosoekarto , ) is conducted in Indonesia and in Japan. This research is a business change practice/empirical research practice in the words of Cronholm and Goldkuhl (). In this paper, how the institutional strengthening for the role of mass media in disaster risk reduction that could be achieved through strengthening three tier institutional frameworks (Nee ) at macro, meso and micro levels, respectively, is elaborated. This study provides an illustration of a comparative study-like SSM-based action research in action, in which debating on Indonesian case is conducted by using relevant purposeful activity systems that are selected and conceptual models that are developed from Japan's experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
40. Evaluation of anti-diphtheria toxoid antibody persistence in school-aged children in Jakarta, Indonesia.
- Author
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Santi, Theresia, Prayitno, Ari, Munasir, Zakiudin, Hadinegoro, Sri Rezeki S., Harahap, Alida Roswita, Werdhani, Retno Asti, Bandar, Ivo Novita Sah, Jo, Juandy, and Hegar, Badriul
- Subjects
IMMUNIZATION ,CROSS-sectional method ,ELEMENTARY schools ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS ,ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay ,BLOOD collection ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MANN Whitney U Test ,DPT vaccines ,ANTIBODY formation ,METROPOLITAN areas ,DATA analysis software ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DIPHTHERIA vaccines ,IMMUNITY ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Background: Diphtheria can be effectively prevented by adequate immunization. A combined vaccine against diphtheria toxoid, pertussis, and tetanus toxoid (DPT) is currently used in routine pediatric immunizations. Outbreaks of diphtheria could emerge in Indonesia as a consequence of declining routine vaccination during the COVID-19 pandemic. Objective: To analyze the impact of the first (administered at 18-24 months of age) and second diphtheria boosters (administered at 5-7 years of age) in retaining protective levels of anti-diphtheria toxoid antibodies. We also investigated for relevant factors associated with anti-diphtheria toxoid antibody titers. Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted in the Senen District of Jakarta, Indonesia. The inclusion criteria were healthy children aged 6 to 7 years with documented history of DPT vaccination. Primary vaccination defined as 3 doses of DPT at age less than 1 year, first booster was DPT vaccination at 18-24 years of age, and second booster was diphtheria-tetanus (DT) vaccination received at 5 to 7 years of age. Peripheral blood specimens were obtained from participating children, after informed consent was provided by their parents. Antibodies against diphtheria in sera specimens were assessed by commercial anti-diphtheria toxoid immunoglobulin G (IgG) enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Results: There were 154 children included in the study, with a female majority (61%). Overall, specific humoral immunity against diphtheria was observed in 113 children (73.4%). There was no statistical difference in immunity level between genders. Importantly, children who received the first and second diphtheria booster had significantly higher anti-diphtheria antibody level than those who did not receive both diphtheria booster (P<0.001). Conclusion: Booster vaccinations are crucial among school-age children in Indonesia to improve their anti- diphtheria immunity and to minimize a risk of diphtheria outbreaks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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41. LARVICIDAL EFFECT OF BREADFRUIT (Artocarpus altilis) FLOWER EXTRACT AGAINST Aedes aegypti.
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Winianti, Ni Wayan, Apsari, Putu Indah Budi, and Jayanti, Ni Kadek Meta
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THERAPEUTIC use of flowers ,FRUIT ,MORTALITY ,RESEARCH funding ,MOSQUITOES ,PLANTS ,QUANTITATIVE research ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INSECT larvae ,INSECTICIDES ,PLANT extracts ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,MEDICINAL plants ,DRUG efficacy ,ANALYSIS of variance ,COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Dengue hemorrhagic fever remains a major problem in Indonesia. The mosquito that spreads this disease is the Aedes aegypti species. The use of larvicides is a viable method to inhibit the growth of larvae into adult mosquitoes. The flowers of breadfruits (Artocarpus atilis) have long been used as a natural mosquito killer. The objectives of this study were to determine the lethal dose 50 (LC50) of breadfruit flower extract and to analyze its potential as a larvicide against stage 2-- 3 instar Aedes aegypti larvae. In this true experimental research, each of four treatment groups was administered with breadfruit flower extracts at concentrations of 25, 50, 75, and 90 ppm, respectively. The positive control group was treated with temephos (Abate), while the negative control group received no treatment. Larval mortality was recorded at 1 hour, 2 hours, 3 hours, 4 hours post-intervention. The observed larval deaths were compared among the groups. Quantitative data encompassing the larval mortality in each group were analyzed using the repetitive analysis of variance (ANOVA) and the probit test with minimum p value <0.05. The results indicated that the LC50 value of breadfruit flower extract was 52.67-- 54.12 ppm. The doses of 50 ppm, 75 ppm and 90 ppm were effective in killing Aedes aegypti larvae. In conclusion, breadfruit flower extract of 50 ppm and higher can effectively kill Aedes aegypti larvae. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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42. A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF PRODUCTION FACTORS AND PRODUCTIVITY FOR SHRIMP FARMS IN THREE ASIAN COUNTRIES: BANGLADESH, INDIA, AND INDONESIA.
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Gordon, Daniel V. and Bjørndal, Trond
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SHRIMP fisheries ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SHRIMPS ,REPRODUCTION - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to provide a comparative index characterization of shrimp production in Bangladesh, India and Indonesia. We approach the problem using a profit decomposition procedure to identify the separate effects of prices, pond size and productivity on the profits of individual farms. This profit decomposition approach relies on application of the Tornqvist index in measurement. Data are made available by the WorldFish Centre, Malaysia. The data represent production, pond area, unit price of output and inputs and corresponding quantities. The results show that pond size is important not only because we observe a strong positive relationship with profits but that the results are suggestive of important scale effects in production. These results indicate that small farms in all three countries are disadvantaged not because they are unproductive or lack the skills to manage but rather that many farms are too small to achieve economic potential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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43. INSTALLING THE 'OUTSIDER' INSIDE.
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Fox, JamesJ.
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COMPARATIVE studies ,NARRATIVES ,THEORY of knowledge ,AUSTRONESIAN languages ,KINGS & rulers ,TIMOR (Indonesian people) - Abstract
This paper examines ten narratives of the 'outsider' who is received and installed inside, thus reordering precedence among an autochthonous population that has received him into their midst. Based on an opposition between the categories of 'inside' and 'outside', these diverse narratives are drawn from across the Austronesian-speaking world from Sumatra through Timor to Fiji. They illustrate one, among several, distinctive Austronesian epistemologies of origin - one often relied upon to distinguish a ruler from those who are ruled. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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44. From West Indies to East Indies: Archipelagic Interchanges.
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Boellstorff, Tom
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ARCHIPELAGOES ,ANTHROPOLOGY ,COMPARATIVE studies ,AREA studies ,GLOBALIZATION - Abstract
In this paper, I work to rethink notions of comparison and area studies by viewing my ethnographic work in Indonesia through the lens of theories developed by anthropologists working in the Caribbean region. In bringing ‘East Indies’ and ‘West Indies’ together in this way, I explore the possibility of reconfigured networks of citation, collaboration and interchange that might help anthropology respond in new ways to contemporary dynamics of globalisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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45. 'Fit for school' - a school-based water, sanitation and hygiene programme to improve child health: Results from a longitudinal study in Cambodia, Indonesia and Lao PDR.
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Duijster, Denise, Monse, Bella, Dimaisip-Nabuab, Jed, Djuharnoko, Pantjawidi, Heinrich-Weltzien, Roswitha, Hobdell, Martin, Kromeyer-Hauschild, Katrin, Kunthearith, Yung, Mijares-Majini, Maria Carmela, Siegmund, Nicole, Soukhanouvong, Panith, and Benzian, Habib
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SCHOOL-based management ,SCHOOL health services ,HAND washing ,DENTAL caries ,HYGIENE ,ANTHELMINTICS ,CAVITY prevention ,CHILD health services ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HELMINTHIASIS ,INTERVIEWING ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,SANITATION ,TOOTH care & hygiene ,WATER supply ,EVALUATION research ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,PREVENTION - Abstract
Background: The Fit for School (FIT) programme integrates school health and Water, Sanitation and Hygiene interventions, which are implemented by the Ministries of Education in four Southeast Asian countries. This paper describes the findings of a Health Outcome Study, which aimed to assess the two-year effect of the FIT programme on the parasitological, weight, and oral health status of children attending schools implementing the programme in Cambodia, Indonesia and Lao PDR.Methods: The study was a non-randomized clustered controlled trial with a follow-up period of two years. The intervention group consisted of children attending public elementary schools implementing the FIT programme, including daily group handwashing with soap and toothbrushing with fluoride toothpaste, biannual school-based deworming; as well as construction of group handwashing facilities. Control schools implemented the regular government health education curriculum and biannual deworming. Per school, a random selection of six to seven-year-old grade-one students was drawn. Data on parasitological infections, anthropometric measurements, dental caries, odontogenic infections and sociodemographic characteristics were collected at baseline and at follow-up (24 months later). Data were analysed using the χ2-test, Mann Whitney U-test and multilevel logistic and linear regression.Results: A total of 1847 children (mean age = 6.7 years, range 6.0-8.0 years) participated in the baseline survey. Of these, 1499 children were available for follow-up examination - 478, 486 and 535 children in Cambodia, Indonesia and Lao PDR, respectively. In all three countries, children in intervention schools had a lower increment in the number of decayed, missing and filled permanent teeth between baseline and follow-up, in comparison to children in controls schools. The preventive fraction was 24% at average. The prevalence of soil-transmitted helminth infection (which was unexpectedly low at baseline), the prevalence of thinness and the prevalence of odontogenic infections did not significantly differ between baseline and follow-up, nor between intervention and control schools.Conclusions: The study found that the FIT programme significantly contributed to the prevention of dental caries in children. This study describes the challenges, learnings and, moreover, the importance of conducting real-life implementation research to evaluate health programmes to transform school settings into healthy learning environments for children. The study is retrospectively registered with the German Clinical Trials Register, University of Freiburg (Trial registration number: DRKS00004485, date of registration: 26th of February, 2013). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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46. The antioxidant and antimicrobial activity of ethanolic extract in roots, stems, and leaves of three commercial Cymbopogon species.
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Wahyuni, Dwi Kusuma, Kharisma, Viol Dhea, Murtadlo, Ahmad Affan Ali, Rahmawati, Cici Tya, Syukriya, Alvi Jauharotus, Prasongsuk, Sehanat, Subramaniam, Sreeramanan, Wibowo, Anjar Tri, and Purnobasuki, Hery
- Subjects
IN vitro studies ,COMPUTER-assisted molecular modeling ,BACILLUS (Bacteria) ,RESEARCH funding ,ETHANOL ,PLANT stems ,DRUG resistance in microorganisms ,PLANT roots ,IMMUNODIAGNOSIS ,STAPHYLOCOCCUS aureus ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ANTI-infective agents ,PLANT extracts ,METABOLITES ,GAS chromatography ,CANDIDA albicans ,ESCHERICHIA coli ,ANTIOXIDANTS ,MASS spectrometry ,LEAVES ,LEMONGRASS ,BIOLOGICAL assay ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DATA analysis software ,CELL surface antigens ,PHARMACODYNAMICS - Abstract
Background: Cymbopogon is a member of the family Poaceae and has been explored for its phytochemicals and bioactivities. Although the antimicrobial activities of Cymbopogon spp. extracts have been extensively studied, comprehensive analyses are required to identify promising compounds for the treatment of antimicrobial resistance. Therefore, this study investigated the antioxidant and antimicrobial properties of Cymbopogon spp. ethanolic extracts in every single organ. Methods: Ethanolic extracts were obtained from three Indonesian commercial species of Cymbopogon spp., namely Cymbopogon citratus (L.) Rendle, Cymbopogon nardus (DC.) Spatf., and Cymbopogon winterianus Jowitt. The leaf, stem, and root extracts were evaluated via metabolite profiling using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC–MS). In silico and in vitro analyses were used to evaluate the antioxidant and antimicrobial properties of the Cymbopogon spp. ethanolic extracts. In addition, bioactivity was measured using cytotoxicity assays. Antioxidant assays were performed using 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) and 2,2-azino-bis [3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid (ABTS) to determine toxicity to Huh7it-1 cells using a tetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay. Finally, the antimicrobial activity of these extracts was evaluated against Candida albicans, Bacillus subtilis, Staphylococcus aureus, and Escherichia coli using a well diffusion assay. Results: GC–MS analysis revealed 53 metabolites. Of these, 2,5-bis(1,1-dimethylethyl)- phenol (27.87%), alpha-cadinol (26.76%), and 1,2-dimethoxy-4-(1-propenyl)-benzene (20.56%) were the predominant compounds. C. winterianus and C. nardus leaves exhibited the highest antioxidant activity against DPPH and ABTS, respectively. Contrastingly, the MTT assay showed low cytotoxicity. C. nardus leaf extract exhibited the highest antimicrobial activity against E. coli and S. aureus, whereas C. winterianus stem extract showed the highest activity against B. substilis. Furthermore, computational pathway analysis predicted that antimicrobial activity mechanisms were related to antioxidant activity. Conclusions: These findings demonstrate that the leaves had strong antioxidant activity, whereas both the leaves and stems showed great antimicrobial activity. Furthermore, all Cymbopogon spp. ethanolic extracts showed low toxicity. These findings provide a foundation for future studies that assess the clinical safety of Cymbopogon spp. as novel drug candidates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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47. Participant analysis of the need for prenatal attachment education packages.
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Purwati, Yuni, Pramono, Noor, Hakimi, Mohammad, Suwandono, Agus, Kristina, Tri Nur, and Anggorowati
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ANXIETY prevention ,MENTAL depression risk factors ,PUBLIC hospitals ,MEDICAL protocols ,RISK assessment ,MATERNAL health services ,QUALITATIVE research ,FOCUS groups ,RESEARCH funding ,ATTACHMENT behavior ,CHILD health services ,SPOUSES ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,CHILD abuse ,PREGNANT women ,PARENTING ,JUDGMENT sampling ,MIDWIFERY education ,EMOTIONS ,AFFECTIVE disorders ,ANXIETY ,PREGNANCY outcomes ,INFANT death ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PRENATAL care ,SIMULATION methods in education ,THEMATIC analysis ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,PRENATAL bonding ,CURRICULUM planning ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL coding ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,MOTHERHOOD ,SOCIAL support ,NEEDS assessment ,HEALTH education ,DATA analysis software ,FETAL development ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CHILDBIRTH - Abstract
Background: Primigravidas are at high risk of experiencing emotional disorders, stress, anxiety, and depression, which can lead to fetal neglect and a lack of adequate pregnancy care. This may result in problems with fetal growth and development, low birth weight, and even infant death. A strong maternal-fetal attachment significantly influences pregnancy care practices. However, there is no prenatal attachment education program included in routine education. Aim: This study aimed to explore healthcare workers' perspectives on the need to develop a prenatal attachment education package for pregnant women in public health centers. Methods: This qualitative study was conducted among eight healthcare workers from eight public health centers in Bantul, Yogyakarta, Indonesia; a regency with the seventh highest infant death rate in the country. Inclusion criteria included healthcare workers in maternity and child health units who resided in Bantul and agreed to participate. Purposive sampling was used to recruit the participants. Data collection was conducted through focus group discussion (FGD) with an interview guide. The FGD data were transcribed and analyzed using NVivo 12 Pro International software. Results: The findings identified 216 codes, 16 categories, and 4 themes, including (1) pregnancy education program, (2) maternal-fetal attachment education program, (3) pregnancy emotional management program, and (4) husband support education program. Conclusion: This study identified four themes and sixteen categories that underscore the need for further research to develop guidelines, materials, and media for prenatal attachment education packages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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48. DIFFERENCES IN CHANGES IN KNOWLEDGE OF WOMEN ABOUT EARLY DETECTION OF CERVICAL CANCER BETWEEN USING PRESENTATION MEDIA COUNSELING AND LEAFLET COUNSELING.
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Herna Yuliana, Baiq Ade, Purwanto, Bambang, Ferdinandus, Euvanggelia Dwilda, and Mulawardhana, Pungky
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LECTURE method in teaching ,PAMPHLETS ,CERVIX uteri tumors ,DATA analysis ,T-test (Statistics) ,EARLY detection of cancer ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes ,PRECANCEROUS conditions ,STATISTICAL sampling ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,CONTROL groups ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,URBAN hospitals ,RESEARCH methodology ,METROPOLITAN areas ,STATISTICS ,HEALTH education ,COUNSELING ,COMPARATIVE studies - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Effectiveness of Giving Ginger and Citronella Oil for Dysmenorrhea among Adolescent Girls.
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Chrisna, Ayu, Cahyati, Yanti, and Mardiani, Dita Eka
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THERAPEUTIC use of essential oils ,PAIN measurement ,DATA analysis ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,JUDGMENT sampling ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,MENARCHE ,GINGER ,PAIN management ,DRUG efficacy ,RESEARCH methodology ,STATISTICS ,QUALITY of life ,DYSMENORRHEA ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,COMPARATIVE studies ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Background: Dysmenorrhea often occurs in adolescent girls and disrupts their daily activities. Dysmenorrhea occurs 1-2 years after menarche, with an average age of 12.8 years. One way to reduce dysmenorrhea is to use plants, such as ginger and citronella oil. Purpose: This study aimed to determine the effectiveness of ginger and citronella oil on dysmenorrhea in adolescent girls. Methods: This research was quasi-experimental with a one-group pretest-posttest design approach. The sample consisted of 68 adolescent girls from SMPN 14 Tasikmalaya city who were experiencing dysmenorrhea with moderate pain intensity. Purposive sampling was used. The results of this study were obtained using the Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) and then analyzed using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test. Results: The research results showed that the average dysmenorrhea score before being administered ginger and citronella oil to adolescent girls was 4.6, and after the intervention, it was 3.69 out of ten. The statistical-test results showed that ginger and citronella oil were effective for dysmenorrhea in adolescent girls (p = 0.000). Conclusion: This study concluded that there is a difference in the average dysmenorrhea score before and after administering ginger and citronella oil to adolescent girls. Therefore, adolescent girls can use ginger and citronella oil to reduce dysmenorrhea. Implications for Nursing: Integrating complementary ginger and citronella oil therapy into nursing or midwifery services is necessary to reduce dysmenorrhea. This innovation can be a reference source to provide care and minimize chemical-drug use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Inclusive approach: a perspective towards more equitable housing provision?
- Author
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Manaf, Asnawi, Suharnomo, Yuzal, Hendri, and Fisher, Micah
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COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,POVERTY ,PUBLIC housing ,PUBLIC welfare ,RESEARCH evaluation ,SOCIAL integration ,SOCIAL justice ,STATISTICS ,GOVERNMENT policy ,DATA analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,INFERENTIAL statistics - Abstract
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to understand the dynamics of inclusive approaches to housing development programs directed at supporting low-income communities.Design/methodology/approach This study uses a mixed-methods approach by employing a combination of case study and survey methods, whereby the development process is studied through qualitative approaches and specific determinant comparisons of quantitative Z-tests. This study provides data from key informants: end-users (ten occupants), leaders of community-based organizations (2), and supporting non-governmental organizations (2).Findings These results indicate that an inclusive approach is more likely be able to provide low-income households with access to a variety of key resources that are identified as housing development priorities, particularly when compared with the supply-side approaches currently being promoted.Practical implications This study helps to encourage policymakers to think about more targeted and facilitative processes to meet the needs of public housing in Indonesia, a challenge that has resulted in ironic effects, and has not met the important challenges in providing access that is adequate for the people of Indonesia.Originality/value The current study provides data that provide evidence of positive value of inclusive approach to response the equitable issues in housing provision, particularly in Indonesia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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