Research Article
Collaborative Governance In Handling Stunting Problems At Bandung City
@INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/eai.29-11-2023.2347582, author={Irma Sri Ardianti and Muhamad Nur Afandi}, title={Collaborative Governance In Handling Stunting Problems At Bandung City}, proceedings={Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Administration Science, ICAS 2023, 29 November 2023, Bandung, West Java, Indonesia}, publisher={EAI}, proceedings_a={ICAS}, year={2024}, month={9}, keywords={collaborative governance stunting toddler malnutrition health}, doi={10.4108/eai.29-11-2023.2347582} }
- Irma Sri Ardianti
Muhamad Nur Afandi
Year: 2024
Collaborative Governance In Handling Stunting Problems At Bandung City
ICAS
EAI
DOI: 10.4108/eai.29-11-2023.2347582
Abstract
The study of short toddlers or stunting is a crucial problem in Indonesia. The incidence of short toddlers or what is called stunting is a nutritional problem experienced by toddlers in the world today, especially in developing countries like Indonesia. Can be said that stunting is a chronic problem that occurs from pregnancy until the child is two years old, where the child's height is shorter than the height of children his age. In implementing the acceleration of stunting reduction in the city of Bandung, specific interventions and sensitive interventions are needed which are implemented in a holistic, integrative and quality manner through coordination, synergy and synchronization. The method used in preparing this article is a descriptive method with a qualitative approach, with data collection techniques using literature/library studies and documentation studies. From the results of the preparation of this article, it can be concluded that collaborative governance in handling stunting in the city of Bandung is already running well. This can be seen from the enthusiasm of the residents in wanting to come to the posyandu, and in the period of one year 2021-2022 the prevalence of stunting in the city of Bandung has decreased by 7%, which was originally 26.4%, has fallen to 19.4% and in 2023 it is targeted to be 14%.