Hernandez-Alvarez Carlos, Arosteguí Jorge, Suazo-Laguna Harold, Reyes Rosa Maria, Coloma Josefina, Harris Eva, Andersson Neil, Ledogar Robert J
CIET, Managua, Nicaragua.
Division of Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology, School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2017 May 30;17(Suppl 1):396. doi: 10.1186/s12889-017-4292-x.
Recent literature on community intervention research stresses system change as a condition for durable impact. This involves highly participatory social processes leading to behavioural change.
Before launching the intervention in the Nicaraguan arm of Camino Verde, a cluster-randomised controlled trial to show that pesticide-free community mobilisation adds effectiveness to conventional dengue controls, we held structured discussions with leaders of intervention communities on costs of dengue illness and dengue control measures taken by both government and households. These discussions were the first step in an effort at Socialising Evidence for Participatory Action (SEPA), a community mobilisation method used successfully in other contexts. Theoretical grounding came from community psychology and behavioural economics.
The leaders expressed surprise at how large and unexpected an economic burden dengue places on households. They also acknowledged that large investments of household and government resources to combat dengue have not had the expected results. Many were not ready to see community preventive measures as a substitute for chemical controls but all the leaders approved the formation of "brigades" to promote chemical-free household control efforts in their own communities.
Discussions centred on household budget decisions provide a good entry point for researchers to engage with communities, especially when the evidence showed that current expenditures were providing a poor return. People became motivated not only to search for ways to reduce their costs but also to question the current response to the problem in question. This in turn helped create conditions favourable to community mobilisation for change.
ISRCTN27581154 .
近期关于社区干预研究的文献强调系统变革是产生持久影响的条件。这涉及高度参与性的社会过程,从而导致行为改变。
在启动“绿径”项目尼加拉瓜分部的干预措施之前——这是一项整群随机对照试验,旨在表明无农药社区动员可为传统登革热防控措施增添成效,我们与干预社区的领导人就登革热疾病的成本以及政府和家庭采取的登革热防控措施进行了结构化讨论。这些讨论是参与式行动证据社会化(SEPA)努力的第一步,SEPA是一种在其他背景下成功使用的社区动员方法。理论基础来自社区心理学和行为经济学。
领导人对登革热给家庭带来的巨大且意想不到的经济负担表示惊讶。他们还承认,家庭和政府为抗击登革热投入的大量资源并未取得预期效果。许多人还未准备好将社区预防措施视为化学防控的替代方法,但所有领导人都批准在各自社区组建“队伍”,以推动无化学药剂的家庭防控工作。
围绕家庭预算决策展开的讨论为研究人员与社区互动提供了一个良好切入点,尤其是当证据表明当前支出回报率不佳时。人们不仅有动力寻找降低成本的方法,还会质疑当前对相关问题的应对措施。这反过来有助于创造有利于社区动员变革的条件。
ISRCTN27581154 。