| Literature DB >> 35790692 |
Thi Kinh Kieu1, Karen Grattan2, Bailey Goldman2, Tran Thi Thuy Ha3, Tran Thi Thu Thi3, Amanda Pomeroy-Stevens4, Damodar Bachani5.
Abstract
The USAID-funded Building Healthy Cities (BHC) work in Da Nang, Vietnam, engaged 108 multi-sector stakeholders to gather qualitative data across two workshops and three citizen town halls from 2019 to 2021. These data were synthesized with the results from BHC's seven other activities in Da Nang to build systems maps. Contextual findings showed that multi-sector, multi-level participation and collaboration have been the key to moving the city toward their smart and livable city goals. Currently, citizen, nongovernmental organization, and private sector collaboration are low for many government sectors, which results in policy and programs that are mismatched to actual needs and therefore have less powerful impacts. When these policies and programs are implemented, they struggle to demonstrate strong benefits to these stakeholder groups, further decreasing participation. This is central to the systems map that BHC developed, and is expanded upon through additional patterns that fall within four main areas: management quality; vision and leadership; workforce capacity; and community engagement. Stakeholders found four key leverage points within this context that, if included in every action, could help overcome barriers. These leverage opportunities are: (1) investing at all levels; (2) improving function and innovation of information technology; (3) increasing participation and feedback; and (4) creating more responsive policy. As BHC concludes activities in Da Nang, local university students will be trained on systems mapping techniques to embed systems thinking skills into the next generation of workforce, and a set of recommendations will be developed to share with the government to act on these findings.Entities:
Keywords: Da Nang; Smart City; Systems mapping; Urban health
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35790692 PMCID: PMC9255833 DOI: 10.1007/s11524-022-00650-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Urban Health ISSN: 1099-3460 Impact factor: 5.801
Research Methodological Framework
| Phase | Data Collection | Participants | Data Analysis |
|---|---|---|---|
Launch June - July 2019 | Form a research team (RT). | BHC staff, EI consultants, and city leaders. | |
| Meet city government and receive approval. | |||
| Apply and obtain research ethics approval (exempt). | |||
| Conduct a city literature review and discuss between RT and city government staff to identify vision statement and framing question. | |||
Gain Clarity July 2019 - July 2020 | Organize 4 workshops to explore 12 key forces through cause-and-effect analysis. | Da Nang governmental departments, nongovernmental organizations, universities, and related projects ( | Cause-and-effect analysis to develop casual loops. |
| Review secondary data (reports related to Da Nang City collected and updated by the RT). | Build a Context Map on Kumu. | ||
| Organize 3 community town halls with 11 focus group discussions (FGDs): (1) to share and refine the provisional map; and (2) gather narratives from diverse perspectives to extend relevance and depth. | Coastal community ( | Map feedback. | |
| Peri-urban community ( | Narrative data for each loop. | ||
| Urban community ( | Finalize map. | ||
Find Leverage October - December 2020 | Target workshop participants based on expertise, sector/department and availability. | Governmental departments (health, environment, food safety), civil society organizations, and community representatives ( | Workshop data synthesis. |
| Organize a Leverage Workshop with 4 FGDs. | Develop systemic change hypothesis/leverage opportunities. | ||
| Visualize on Leverage Map. | |||
Act Strategically January - October 2021 | Conduct Waste Free School model pilot activity. | Participants from governmental departments (health, education, environment, food safety, information and communication), civil society organizations, private sector, researchers and community representatives ( | Code qualitative analysis (Nvivo) to identify key themes proposed by the participants. |
| Organize online Theory of Action Workshop with 3 FGDs. | |||
| Review the process of building maps and propose/design solutions toward a healthier city. |
Obstacles and opportunities
| Obstacles | Opportunities |
|---|---|
| Limited digital data and accessibility | Strong leadership |
| Quality of labor force | Commitment and practices for bottom-up decision-making |
| Gaps between social groups | Natural resources |
| Lack of collaboration among stakeholders | Hospitality of city’s citizens |
| Limited citizen consciousness in building a healthy and smart city | Improvements of infrastructure |
| Hygiene issues | Utilization of smart technology for collecting data and monitoring community needs |
| Gaps in living conditions among different districts | International support and cooperation |
| Threats of environmental pollution | |
| Overdevelopment of tourism |
Leverage opportunities
| Leverage opportunity | Description |
|---|---|
| Opportunity 1: investment at all levels | The opportunity to invest and be a part of a thriving, healthy city is extended at all levels (from external investors to city departments to citizens) through strong, inclusive leadership that encourages creativity and long-term buy in. This increased investment will in turn contribute to the quality of data available for city planning as well as the engagement of citizens and workforce in city improvement efforts. |
| Opportunity 2: function and innovation in information technology | Balance is created between the excitement and opportunity of new technology, and the accessibility and functionality of known and tested practices. Finding this balance will help attract and retain a skilled workforce capable of producing high-quality data for strong proactive decision-making that will support that growth through stability. |
| Opportunity 3: participation and feedback | Participation and feedback is prerequisite to the success of any implementation, from a sectoral program to a citywide policy. When effective management practices are employed to foster increased participation, not only in the programs themselves but also in how they are designed and improved, the understanding and awareness of city initiatives are similarly enhanced. This creates a positive feedback loop, continuing to build participation, awareness, and impact. |
| Opportunity 4: responsive policy | When policies are responsive and designed to best fit the current context, challenges with implementation and enforcement will be reduced. This will allow policies to operate as intended, preventing risks to health and protecting the people and environment that make the city so special. |