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THE RELATIONSHIP OF ZOOM FATIGUE AND ACHIEVEMENT MOTIVATION IN NURSING STUDENTS Yosep, Iyus; Sismayadi, Zahrul Insan; Mardhiyah, Ai; Maulana, Indra; Hazmi, Helmy
Journal of Nursing Culture and Technology Vol. 1 No. 1 (2024): Volume 1 No. 1 2024
Publisher : Rifapublisher.id

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.70049/jnctech.v1i1.5

Abstract

Introduction: The impact of the Covid-19 Pandemic has disrupted various aspects, one of which is the education aspect which requires learning to be carried out remotely via video conference causing students to experience zoom tiredness. Besides that, as long as student study from the house via video conferencing, the potential happening decline in skills academic as a result competent students not achieved with good consequences from achievements motivation distracted students. Objective: The purpose of study he knew the connection Among Fatigue Zoom Levels with Achievement Motivation in student Faculty Nursing Universitas Padjadjaran in online learning during the Covid-19 Pandemic. Method: Population study student active S1 Faculty of Nursing Universitas Padjadjaran. Type study quantitative with design descriptive correlation. Sampling technique will use disproportionate stratified random sampling (n=271). The Instrument of study Zoom Exhaustion & Fatigue Scales for measure zoom tired and achievements motivation Scales for measure achievements motivation. Results: The results of data analysis were obtained sig. 0.000 < 0.05 with score correlation coefficient worth positive 0.289 which means strength relationship enough. Motivation owns a great influence on achieving learning. Although in implementation needed management good activity for avoiding possibility happening zoom tired. Conclusion: There is an adequate and positive relationship between zoom fatigue levels with achievement motivation in student Faculty of Nursing Universitas Padjadjaran during online learning in the pandemic period Covid-19.
NAVIGATING CROSS-BORDER HEALTHCARE POLICIES AT THE SARAWAK–WEST KALIMANTAN BORDER Rachmat, Eva Novianty; Carlo, Dolly Paul; Hazmi, Helmy
The Indonesian Journal of Public Health Vol. 21 No. 1 (2026): THE INDONESIAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH
Publisher : Universitas Airlangga

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.20473/ijph.v21i1.2026.85-100

Abstract

Introduction: Access to healthcare remains a challenge for the Sarawak–West Kalimantan border communities. The close proximity to neighbouring countries and uneven healthcare infrastructure often lead these communities to seek care across the border. A previous study revealed that nearly 60% to 70 % of Malaysia’s incoming patients came from Indonesia. Aims: This study aimed to identify and compare the characteristics of Malaysia’s and Indonesia’s healthcare access policies related to Sarawak–West Kalimantan border communities. Methods: This study employed a qualitative phenomenological approach and conducted semi-structured, in-depth interviews with 40 participants, including government officials, community leaders, and residents from 12 locations along the border. Data collection was conducted between October 2023 and May 2024, and the collected data were analysed through inductive thematic analysis. Results: Healthcare mobility between Sarawak and West Kalimantan relies on informal community trust over standardized frameworks. Malaysia’s institutionalized outreach contrasts with Indonesia’s army-assisted delivery and insurance schemes. Divergent border procedures and non-binding bilateral platforms like Sosek Malindo further limit effective cooperation, highlighting a significant lack of harmonized enforcement and policy integration. Conclusion: Sustainable cross-border healthcare governance requires formalised bilateral standard operating procedures encompassing emergency mobility, disease surveillance, and referral systems, complemented by active community involvement. Strengthening these mechanisms would transform cross-border healthcare from an informal, ad hoc practice into an institutionalised framework that ensures equitable and continuous care for border communities.