White Misconducts: Informal Acts in Crossborder Primary Health Service Delivery (Case of Panggang, Central Java, Indonesia)

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International Journal of Research and Scientific Innovation (IJRSI) | Volume VIII, Issue XII, December 2021 | ISSN 2321–2705

Construction Bonds Effect for Novice Construction Firms in Kampala Uganda

Isti Andini, Achmad Djunaedi, Deva Fosterharoldas Swasto, Ahmad Sarwadi
Department of Architecture and Planning, Faculty of Engineering, Universitas Gadjah Mad., Indonesia

IJRISS Call for paper

Abstract: Public health services in Indonesia are managed in a territorialism approach that limits services to a specific administrative area. Refferal system in health care sets primary health facilities to each citizen and limits crossborder services. The absence of primary health care in Glagaharjo border settlement and the limitation of crossborder services created barriers for universal health care in rural provincial border settlements. Interruptions in providing services to borderland communities were a major problem with the system during the era of good governance. Informal crossborder services involving changes in health-care administration came as a viable option for ensuring universal health-care services. This paper examines the process of crossborder primary health service delivery by Pustu Panggang, Central Java Province, to communities in Glagaharjo, Daerah Istimewa Yogyakarta Province, sharing provincial borderline. Data was gathered through in-depth interviews with local officials and stakeholders. Using the compare and contrast technique, the concepts of good governance and cross-border health services are compared and contrasted. The findings shows that informal acts including exceeding-authority decision making, ignorance, and other forms of misconducts come as the impromptu strategy to keep primary care available to those in need. As Covid-19 pandemic unfolded, informal acts save community from the lack of access to primary healthcare due to the cost of formal arrangement.

Keywords: primary healthcare, rural border, good governance, informal, collaboration

I. INTRODUCTION

Good Governance in Decentralized Healthcare System in Indonesia

The global approach in development administration has brought Good Governance principles. Although the concepts has been dynamically developed over decades, it is still considered as a powerful approach to ensure better and more sustainable development [1],[2]. Indonesia has undergone significant shift in public administration, including decentralization of decision making process towards regional equality [3]. The introduction of a decentralized system in public administration was one of the major changes in the Indonesian public services provision system.