cover
Contact Name
Rachmat Hidayat
Contact Email
hanifmedisiana@gmail.com
Phone
+6281949581088
Journal Mail Official
editor.arkus@gmail.com
Editorial Address
Jl Sirna Raga no 99, 8 Ilir, Ilir Timur 3, Palembang, Indonesia
Location
Kota palembang,
Sumatera selatan
INDONESIA
Arkus
Published by HM Publisher
ISSN : 20891393     EISSN : 28085035     DOI : https://doi.org/10.37275/arkus
Arkus publishes original articles, article reviews, and case reports and is designed as a place of dissemination of information and scientific knowledge to develop human wealth. Arkus publishes all manuscripts in multidisciplinary fields (social sciences, sciences, technology, engineering, health, education, religion, law, economics and environmental).
Arjuna Subject : Umum - Umum
Articles 3 Documents
Search results for , issue "Vol. 12 No. 1 (2026): Arkus" : 3 Documents clear
The Limits of Resilience: Why Self-Efficacy Fails to Mitigate Technostress during Radical Core Banking Transformations Siska Hardiyanti Putri; Laila Refiana Said; Meiske Claudia; Doni Stiadi; Anna Nur Faidah
Arkus Vol. 12 No. 1 (2026): Arkus
Publisher : HM Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.37275/arkus.v12i1.860

Abstract

The digitalization of the banking sector has shifted from a competitive advantage to a survival imperative. However, the migration to radical Core Banking Systems often precipitates Technostress, a phenomenon that threatens employee well-being. This study investigates the impact of Technostress on Work-Life Balance among banking professionals during a high-stakes digital transformation involving the implementation of the Temenos T24 system. Crucially, it challenges the prevailing assumption that individual Self-Efficacy serves as a universal buffer against these stressors. A quantitative, explanatory study was conducted on a purposive sample of 107 frontline and back-office staff at a Regional Development Bank in Indonesia. Data were analyzed using Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modeling with SmartPLS 4.0 to assess the measurement and structural models. The findings reveal that Technostress exerts a potent and significant negative effect on Work-Life Balance (path coefficient -0.29, p value 0.000). Paradoxically, and contrary to established theoretical expectations, Self-Efficacy failed to moderate this relationship (path coefficient 0.06, p value 0.500). In conclusion, the study identifies a Limit of Resilience, suggesting that during radical and structural technological upheavals, individual psychological resources such as Self-Efficacy are overwhelmed by systemic techno-overload and invasion. This shifts the onus of intervention from individual coping strategies to organizational job redesign.
Catalyzing Knowledge Diffusion: A Meta-Synthesis of Intellectual Property Frameworks and FDI-Driven Technology Transfer in ASEAN Free Trade Zones Fadlan; E Arinda Chikita
Arkus Vol. 12 No. 1 (2026): Arkus
Publisher : HM Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.37275/arkus.v12i1.868

Abstract

The rapid economic integration of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) was historically driven by Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). However, the role of Intellectual Property (IP) frameworks in transforming foreign capital into genuine technological transfer remained heavily debated. This study quantitatively and qualitatively evaluated the impact of IP frameworks and institutional quality on FDI-driven knowledge diffusion within ASEAN Free Trade Zones (FTZs). A quantitative meta-analysis and systematic synthesis were conducted utilizing empirical data extracted from nine essential econometric studies. Reported coefficients from diverse regression models were statistically converted into Standardized Mean Differences (SMD) to allow for pooled analysis. A DerSimonian-Laird random-effects model was employed, and heterogeneity was assessed utilizing the I-squared statistic. The study selection process yielded nine foundational manuscripts. Risk of bias assessment indicated high methodological quality. The pooled meta-analysis demonstrated a statistically significant positive effect of strengthened institutional and IP frameworks on technology transfer proxies (Pooled SMD = 0.46; 95% Confidence Interval: 0.32, 0.60; p < 0.001). Significant heterogeneity was observed (I-squared = 68.4%, p < 0.01). Tabulated findings revealed that FTZs significantly boosted regional innovation indices, though actual absorption depended strictly on local absorptive capacity. In conclusion, robust IP laws and high institutional quality within FTZs strongly suggest a catalytic effect on formal knowledge diffusion. To maximize labor productivity, ASEAN member states must pair strict IP protection with active learning initiatives and dedicated technology transfer incentives.
From Accreditation Audit to Actionable Strategy: A Mixed-Methods, Priority-Setting Evaluation of Hospital Pharmacy Services under the 2024 Indonesian Hospital Accreditation Standards Mohammad Febry Andintias; Hardiyani Presticasari
Arkus Vol. 12 No. 1 (2026): Arkus
Publisher : HM Publisher

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.37275/arkus.v12i1.889

Abstract

Hospital accreditation frameworks generate aggregate compliance scores that obscure the indicator-level heterogeneity on which meaningful quality improvement depends. The 2024 Indonesian Hospital Accreditation Standards (Standar Akreditasi Rumah Sakit/STARKES 2024) operationalise hospital pharmacy quality through seven Pharmaceutical Care and Drug Management (PKPO) standards, but no peer-reviewed study has yet linked STARKES 2024 compliance scoring to systematic priority-setting or to an implementation-ready action plan. In this descriptive evaluative, sequential explanatory mixed-methods study conducted at the Pharmacy Department of a Class C public hospital in Central Java, Indonesia, eight resident pharmacists (n = 8; institutional census) scored 53 STARKES 2024 indicators, triangulated through in-depth interviews, observation, patient-journey simulation, and document tracing. The Hanlon prioritisation method ranked residual gaps, and a facilitated focus-group discussion produced a SMART action plan. Aggregate compliance was 90.54% (95% CI 85.1–94.3; p < 0.001 versus the 80% threshold), with standard-level scores spanning 83.33–95.00% and a median absolute deviation of 4.72 percentage points. Hanlon analysis yielded three actionable top-tier priorities — collaborative therapeutic drug monitoring (OPR = 84.00), annual formulary evaluation (OPR = 74.67), and cytostatic compounding competency (OPR = 69.33) — robust across sensitivity perturbations. Pareto analysis concentrated 70.2% of the priority-weighted residual burden in the top three gaps. The study establishes the STARKES 2024 + Hanlon pairing as a discriminating, transferable template for translating accreditation compliance into measurable pharmacy quality improvement.

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