During the pandemic crisis that hit after 2020, Indonesia, like many other countries, faced tremendous challenges in areas such as health, economy, and mobility. An in-depth understanding of the dynamics and changes in these areas is essential to address the impacts of the pandemic. This research is an attempt to deeply analyze the impact of the pandemic and the most effective forecasting methods based on data and phenomena. Indonesia, with its growing economy and constantly adapting health system, faces conventional economic impacts, while its health system response tries to keep up with urgent needs driven by the spread of the virus. In the context of mobility, changes in how people move and interact significantly affect virus transmission. Modeling a pandemic event with all its complexities is not an easy task. Even more so, in finding the right method for prediction, ensemble techniques such as stacking and regression voting are emerging as promising approaches. However, deep learning and particle swarm optimization (PSO) techniques offer new innovations. The results of this study show that the ensemble vote provides the best performance in predicting confirmed positive cases and mortality based on factors of health, economic and population mobility in Indonesia. Through feature importance analysis using MDI and Tree SHAP, we conclude that factors such as active cases, the number of vaccinations, and economic indicators, such as close IDR and close IHSG, have a significant influence on the growth of confirmed positive cases. Meanwhile, recovery factors and vaccination number play an important role in the growth of the number of death cases. This study confirms that a multivariate approach that considers health, economy and mobility is the key to understanding and responding more effectively to the pandemic in Indonesia.
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