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Qualitative analysis of Indonesian hospital pharmacist’s perceptions of their roles and behaviour during the covid-19 pandemic Prasetyaningrum, Dina Ayu; Purwonugroho, Tunggul Adi; Mustikaningtia, Ika; Ilma, Dewi Latifatul; Sholihat, Nia Kurnia; Maharani, Laksmi
Academic Hospital Journal Vol 6, No 2 (2024)
Publisher : Rumah Sakit Akademik Universitas Gadjah Mada

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.22146/ahj.v6i2.100052

Abstract

AbstractBackground: Pharmacists are health workers who play an important role in dealing with COVID-19 pandemic problems. This study explored the hospital pharmacist's perception of their roles and behaviours and the influence factors during the COVID-19 pandemic period.Material and Methods: The research was conducted using phenomenological qualitative methods through in-depth online interviews using an online meetings platform. Informants were taken until the data was saturated. Credibility tests by member checking, dependability, and confirmability tests were performed to ensure data validity. The results of the interviews then were analyzed by thematic analysis.Results: Eight informants were included with 5 emerging themes revealed from this study. The theme consists of the pharmacist's high commitment to his important role as a team member of the healthcare provider in providing the best service by adapting their services, ensuring rational therapy for COVID-19 patients, and maintaining the availability of medicines, medical devices, and consumable medical materials. Furthermore, pharmacists described some innovation strategies, like drug delivery for outpatients and telepharmacy services. The supporting factors for pharmacists in their services were interprofessional collaboration between pharmacists and other healthcare providers. Support from colleagues, hospital management, government, donations and technology were also revealed as positive factors. The barrier factors included uncertain pandemic conditions, pharmacists who were exposed to the virus and the mental health condition of healthcare professionals during the pandemic.Conclusion: Pharmacists have a strong commitment to playing a crucial part in the healthcare team in offering the most treatment possible and providing management work. They created some innovative initiatives to tackle the COVID-19 burden. Supportive and barrier factors that affect pharmacist performance during pandemics were also disclosed and examined in this paper.Keywords:  
From data opacity to data literacy: co-producing welfare transparency through decile-based public information socialization at the village level Roziqin, Rafli Miftakhul; Fadiya, Salwa; Maulana, Abdi Luhung; Putri, Talita Benita Agus; Pratiwi, Zaskia Indah; Kinasih, Mutiara Lintang; Shodiq, Azka Kurniawan; Solihati, Adinda Dwi Nur; Gibran, Darrell; Salsabila, Nadia Septiya; Fadillah, Tyas; Purwonugroho, Tunggul Adi
Priviet Social Sciences Journal Vol. 6 No. 3 (2026): March 2026
Publisher : Privietlab

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.55942/pssj.v6i3.1636

Abstract

Transparency in social assistance governance remains a key challenge in improving targeting accuracy and public trust, particularly at the village level. This community service study examines the impact of decile-based public information socialization on community understanding of social assistance distribution and the Kartu Indonesia Sehat (KIS) program in Banjareja Village, Kebumen Regency. Using a pre-experimental one-group pre-test–post-test design, data were collected from 32 participants, including village officials and RT/RW representatives. Community understanding was measured using a structured questionnaire administered before and after the socialization activity. Owing to the non-normal data distribution, differences between the pre-test and post-test scores were analyzed using the Wilcoxon Signed-Ranks Test. The results indicate a statistically significant improvement in community understanding following the socialization activity (p < 0.05). The findings suggest that combining public information transparency with interactive discussions enhances policy literacy and supports participatory engagement in social assistance governance. The involvement of local actors reflects the practice of co-production, in which communities actively contribute to understanding and monitoring welfare policies. This study highlights the importance of participatory, data-informed socialization as a practical approach to strengthening transparency, accountability, and community engagement in social assistance programs at the village level.