Kumar Praveen, Dhand Amar, Tabak Rachel G, Brownson Ross C, Yadama Gautam N
Boston College School of Social Work, Boston College, 125 McGuinn Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467 USA.
Department of Neurology, Harvard Medical School/Brigham and Women's Hospital, 75 Francis Street, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
Arch Public Health. 2017 Dec 14;75:70. doi: 10.1186/s13690-017-0244-2. eCollection 2017.
Implementing efficient stoves and clean fuels in low and middle-income countries are critical for improving health of poor women and children and improve the environment. Cleaner biomass stoves, however, perform poorly against the World Health Organization's indoor air quality guidelines. This has shifted the focus to systematic dissemination and implementation of cleaner cooking systems such as liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) among poor communities. Even when there is some uptake of LPG by poor communities, its sustained use has been low. Concurrent use of LPG with traditional biomass cookstoves compromises reductions in household air pollution and limits health and environmental dividends. Therefore understanding key drivers of adoption and sustained implementation of clean fuels among the poor is critical. There is a significant gap, however, in the research to understand determinants and sustained exclusive use of clean fuels in rural poor communities.
METHODS/DESIGN: Using a case control study design, this study will explore the impact of affordability, accessibility, and awareness on adoption and sustained use of LPG among rural poor communities of India. The study uses a multistage random sampling to collect primary data from 510 households. Case group or LPG adopters constitute 255 households while control group or non-LPG adopters constitute the remaining 255 households. The study will deploy sophisticated stove use monitoring sensors in each of the stoves in 100 case group households to monitor stove use and stacking behavior (using clean and traditional systems of cooking) of participants for 12 months. Moreover, this will be the first study to explore the impact of personal social networks striated by gender on LPG adoption. This study is guided by the RE-AIM (Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance) implementation science evaluation framework.
Lessons from this study will feed into a larger discussion on developing a pro-poor strategy to foster uptake and sustained use of cleaner cooking systems such as LPG. Understanding the determinants of adoption and sustained use of cleaner cooking systems through the RE-AIM framework will expand our insights on implementation of cleaner cooking systems among poor communities and will advance implementation science in the clean cooking sector. A thorough study of such implementation strategies is crucial to realize multiple UN Sustainable Development Goals on global health, climate change, and energy security.
在低收入和中等收入国家推广高效炉灶和清洁燃料对于改善贫困妇女和儿童的健康状况以及保护环境至关重要。然而,更清洁的生物质炉灶在达到世界卫生组织的室内空气质量准则方面表现不佳。这使得重点转向在贫困社区系统地推广和实施更清洁的烹饪系统,如液化石油气(LPG)。即使贫困社区对液化石油气有一定的使用,但持续使用率一直很低。将液化石油气与传统生物质炉灶同时使用会削弱家庭空气污染的减少效果,并限制健康和环境效益。因此,了解贫困人群采用和持续使用清洁燃料的关键驱动因素至关重要。然而,在理解农村贫困社区清洁燃料的决定因素和持续独家使用方面的研究存在显著差距。
方法/设计:本研究采用病例对照研究设计,将探讨可负担性、可及性和认知度对印度农村贫困社区采用和持续使用液化石油气的影响。该研究采用多阶段随机抽样从510户家庭收集原始数据。病例组或液化石油气采用者有255户家庭,而对照组或非液化石油气采用者有其余255户家庭。该研究将在100户病例组家庭的每台炉灶中部署先进的炉灶使用监测传感器,以监测参与者12个月的炉灶使用情况和堆叠行为(使用清洁和传统烹饪系统)。此外,这将是第一项探讨按性别划分的个人社交网络对采用液化石油气的影响的研究。本研究以RE-AIM(覆盖范围、有效性、采用率、实施情况和维持情况)实施科学评估框架为指导。
本研究的经验教训将纳入关于制定扶贫战略以促进采用和持续使用更清洁烹饪系统(如液化石油气)的更大讨论中。通过RE-AIM框架理解更清洁烹饪系统采用和持续使用的决定因素,将扩展我们对贫困社区实施更清洁烹饪系统情况的认识,并将推动清洁烹饪领域的实施科学发展。对这种实施战略进行全面研究对于实现联合国关于全球健康、气候变化和能源安全的多个可持续发展目标至关重要。