| Literature DB >> 35778644 |
Muh Afdhal1, Andi Alam2, Karen Grattan3, Bailey Goldman3, Ahmad Isa2, Amanda Pomeroy-Stevens4, Damodar Bachani5.
Abstract
In Makassar, Indonesia, the USAID-funded Building Healthy Cities (BHC) project engaged 240 multi-sector stakeholders to gather qualitative data across three workshops and two citizen town halls from 2019 to 2021. These data were synthesized with results from BHC's nine other Makassar activities to build maps of the current system and identify high-impact areas for engagement. Contextual findings showed that Makassar leadership has actively innovated and used new technology to improve the city, resulting in improved connectivity and responsiveness. However, this drive toward innovation has strained existing infrastructure and workforce capacity. When this strain fails to meet promised results, citizens are less likely to engage and support the innovations. This is central to the systems map that BHC developed, and is expanded upon through additional patterns that fall within four main areas: (1) leadership, governance, and financing; (2) infrastructure and workforce; (3) collaboration and data; and (4) community cohesion and awareness. Stakeholders found three key leverage points within this context that, if included in every action, could help overcome barriers. These leverage opportunities are: (1) increasing data-driven decision-making; (2) ensuring equitable policy and leadership; and (3) increasing community participation. By combining key patterns discovered in the Context Map with the leverage opportunities, BHC was able to co-create with stakeholders six "coherent actions" that can move Makassar to a healthier, "Sombere (kind-hearted and hospitable) and Smart City." BHC has been working with the city planning office to incorporate the map findings into its bottom-up planning processes and the 5-year mid-term plan for Makassar.Entities:
Keywords: Smart Cities; Systems thinking; Urban health
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35778644 PMCID: PMC9360269 DOI: 10.1007/s11524-022-00651-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Urban Health ISSN: 1099-3460 Impact factor: 5.801
Summary of Makassar’s systems mapping process
| Step | Dates | Source of data used to facilitate workshop | Participants | Data analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Defining Context | 13–14 September 2018 | Analysis of baseline assessment data | 38 stakeholders | Cause-and-effect analysis to develop casual loops. |
| Finding Leverage | Leverage workshop: 30 April 2019 | Context Map | 42 stakeholders | Identify leverage opportunities and high impact actions. |
3 Town halls: (1) 22 February 2019 (2) 22 March 2019 (3) 21–27 June 2019 | Relevant loops from Context Map | (1) Women’s group: 20 participants (2) Slum area group: 20 participants (3) Middle income group: 13 participants | Define leverage opportunities. | |
| Creating Action | 28–29 January 2020 | Context Map and leverage opportunities | 68 stakeholders | Identify a set of actions to move Makassar toward its long-term goal of being a world class city that is healthy and livable for all. |
Source: For more details on these workshops, please see [23–25]
Makassar context map areas
| Areas | Description |
|---|---|
| Leadership, governance, and financing | Any new actions to help Makassar grow in a healthy way will need to work with the behavior, knowledge, and practices related to accountability and management in the governance structures, which are defining, developing, and enforcing policies, procedures, rules, guidelines, etc., and continually monitoring their proper implementation. Community participation in budgeting processes is limited due to limited access to the information to monitor, evaluate, and audit the process, and to challenge decisions. |
| Infrastructure and workforce | Any forward planning by the city administration needs to ensure that basic needs of the citizens are being planned and provided for in an equitable way for healthy growth and development of Makassar City. Having an enabling infrastructure and environment, and a trained workforce to provide essential services such as health, education, and sanitation, is absolutely necessary for citizens to survive. |
| Collaboration and data | Any city, in order to grow in a smart way, needs to have a well-established information system. Information systems are an integrated set of components for collecting, storing, and processing data for providing information. The purpose of these information systems is to turn raw data into useful information that can provide evidence and correct knowledge for decision-making. |
| Community cohesion and awareness | Community awareness is the community’s understanding of the importance and implications of various programs, policies, and laws developed for them. The ability to engage the population in healthy development efforts is recognized as the key to achieving program impact goals and enabling strong leadership. |
Three leverage opportunities
| Leverage opportunity | Description |
|---|---|
| 1. Increasing quality, accessibility, and timeliness of data for decision-making | This leverage opportunity is, at its core, about enhancing and expanding data driven decision-making. If key stakeholders have good quality data for decision-making, the city will be able to effectively target and distribute resources to achieve positive results. |
| 2. Ensuring equity and transparency in policy implementation to ensure equitable community access to services | Policy can improve progress on achieving positive goals by providing clear tools, methods, and expectations for fostering community participation and effectively managing and utilizing data. By extending transparency of policy and practice to community members, they will be able to develop realistic expectations for government services and feel empowered to support accountability. |
| 3. Maximizing community participation in programs to improve community awareness of health promoting practices and resources | In order to improve access for all, it is necessary to improve government outreach and increase citizen education, awareness, and participation in city planning efforts. If inequality is reduced and community participation is increased, there will be greater acceptability and participation in existing city processes and less exclusion/higher utilization of services. |
Proposed Makassar Healthy City actions
| How might we | Proposed coherent action summary |
|---|---|
| Sustaining municipal support for the goal of a healthy Makassar | |
| Foster meaningful accountability, increase communication and coordination, and make policy decisions and processes more transparent and participatory? | The purpose of this action is to foster meaningful dialogue, increase communication and coordination, and make policy decisions and processes more transparent and participatory to sustain a whole-city health Makassar effort. This would happen by using information and communications technology to increase transparency in the Musrenbang process and engaging city officials in the RT/RW (sub-district or kelurahan) or neighborhood levels. This would create not only a comprehensive approach to building healthier communities but also opportunities to strengthen community participation. |
| Sustain a whole-city healthy Makassar effort? | |
| Leading the way on a circular economy | |
| Address waste removal more effectively, even as our population grows? | The purpose of this activity is to create a new waste management economy. This would happen by engaging the private sector, nongovernmental organizations, and communities affected by poor waste management and its health effects to carry out innovations in waste reduction in a revenue generating way. This model realizes that environmental management is not just the responsibility of the government. |
| Creating a culture of data for health | |
| Make it easier to use data to support health in Makassar? | The purpose of this activity is to improve the timeliness and usability of data across sectors relating to urban health. This would include building the capacity of health workers and government officials, and using existing technology and resources such as DHIS-2 and the war room. This would create a trained staff, improve data management, reduce the manual process of data entry, and promote data utilization across sectors. |
| Encourage and build the capacity of health care workers and government staff to collect, manage, and use data? | |
| Strengthen the existing data systems? | |
| Creating a more water-resilient city | |
| Keep producing enough clean water for a growing population even while waste and flood waters keep rising? | The purpose of this activity is to create resiliency to rising flood and waste water in a sustainable manner. This would happen by engaging multi-sector stakeholder partnerships including government, nongovernmental organizations, private sector, and those communities most at risk of flooding. This would create a safe, healthy, and livable environment for all sections of society. |
| Unclog waterways and drains while also addressing the need for more job opportunities in informal settlements? | |
| Growing a healthier next generation of citizens | |
| Create a city that promotes heathier children? | The purpose of this action is to build Makassar into a child friendly city by keeping the focus on health and living environments of children through a bottom-up approach, active community participation, and multi-sector engagement. This would reduce inequities from birth, increase women's ability to participate in the workforce, and lower health care costs in the long term. |
| Ensure access to healthy food for every Makassarese? | |
| Ensure awareness about healthy food and hygiene among food handlers and citizens? | |
| Encourage children to adopt health promoting behaviors? | |
| Encouraging healthy lifestyles for noncommunicable disease prevention | |
| Reduce the risk of noncommunicable diseases within communities while also greening our living spaces? | The purpose of this action is to improve healthy lifestyles to reduce noncommunicable disease. This would happen by strengthening community-based intervention for noncommunicable disease prevention. This model will encourage community-based intervention by optimizing operational incentives and strengthening healthy ecosystems. |
Coherent action example—sustaining municipal support for the goal of a healthy Makassar
| Area | Leverage opportunity | Sub-action |
|---|---|---|
| Leadership, governance, and financing | Data for decision-making | Bappeda and the Department of Communication and Information (Kominfo) should decide on a regular multi-sector mechanism for discussing cross-sector data alerts that come up in the war room, to build in the expectation that these data will be regularly discussed and used for planning. |
| Equitable policy and leadership | Develop municipal policies, workforce training programs, and technical support to increase not just data reporting but also data usage and visualization within the war room by city leadership, with a particular focus on getting the related sector data used as part of regular city mid-term, near-term, and long-term planning. | |
| Bappeda should regularly work across donors/nongovernmental organizations/private sector on key coherent action areas to ensure they are aligning funding and programs with Healthy Makassar goals, and targeting alleys (neighborhoods) with highest needs. | ||
| Citizen engagement | Use a systems approach for the Musrenbang that best utilizes citizen feedback in the process to develop a budget and workplan each year. The method used should be transparent, systematic, and replicable, and allow for public release of the findings | |
| Infrastructure and workforce | Data for decision-making | Improve workforce capacity for using data through changes to university programs for each sector, civil servants training courses, or some other form of regular capacity development. |
| Equitable policy and leadership | Improve government investment for facilities and infrastructure to support data management and encourage data-driven decision-making. This investment needs to be supported by enhancing workforce capacity for data managers to meet the need for qualified workforce to use information technology and manage data from collection to utilization. | |
| Citizen engagement | Strengthen the integrated system for managing citizen complaints with GIS technology into the central war room that is accessible for the communities to track their complaints and progress and to give feedback. | |
| Collaboration and data | Data for decision-making | Bappeda and Kominfo should collaborate to use collected data from communication channels including citizen reporting systems, social media, and electronic-based channels to identify gaps in service and inform service delivery policy as well as for program planning and budgeting. These data can be used for bottom-up planning during the Musrenbang. |
| Equitable policy and leadership | Encourage a "One Data" regulation plan to be ratified at the city level. In addition, the city government should implement a city level policy that requires all government departments, nongovernmental organizations, and private sectors to share their data including mechanism, type of data, variable, data use for decision-making, person in charge, and their incentive. A one data governance model can be implemented across different systems to cover many data sources and departments which involve multi-sector stakeholders in the process of data integration and dashboard management. | |
| Citizen engagement | Increase outreach campaigns on key environmental health and public health topics. Citizen reporting system data can be used to identify the topics that are most pressing, such as road safety, opening drains by reducing loose garbage, etc. These campaigns can be timed to coincide with key points in the Musrenbang process to ensure citizens know what to ask for to fix any enduring health-related issues in their neighborhoods. | |
| Community cohesion and awareness | Data for decision-making | Increase transparency of the decision-making process and how selected programs were implemented. This can be done via public posting of Musrenbang rankings/ratings. |
| Equitable policy and leadership | Develop and use a city monitoring and evaluation plan for monitoring progress on the "Sombere and Smart City" goals that are tied to RT/RW (sub-district or kelurahan) level improvements. | |
| Citizen engagement | Engage Healthy Alleys to do their own prioritization exercises around what they need to improve their Healthy Alley indicators, so that they come prepared to ask for these items during the Musrenbang. | |
| Review the Musrenbang process to see whether it can be augmented by developing a year-round community collaboration platform that supports standardized, trusted, and ongoing community engagement. |
Key constraining factors to effective healthy city implementation (Palutturi, 2013)
| Environment/context | Clear communication |
| Enabling climate | Open and frequent |
| Established formal and informal communication links | |
| Membership nature | |
| Commitment and synergy | Purposes |
| Understanding the partner needs and trust | Concrete goals and objectives |
| Collaborative members seeing collaboration as in their self interest | Shared vision |
| Voluntarism relating to members' contribution | Shared responsibilities, benefits, and risks |
| Process and structure | Resources |
| Clear roles and responsibilities | Strong leadership and political will |
| Community participation | Skills and capacity |
Source: Palutturi S. Healthy Cities Implementation in Indonesia: Challenges and Determinants of Successful Partnership Development at Local Government Level. Griffith University; 2013.