Srinivas Prashanth Nuggehalli, Seshadri Tanya, Velho Nandini, Babu Giridhara R, Madegowda C, Channa Basappa Yogish, Narasimhamurthi Nityasri Sankha, Majigi Sumanth Mallikarjuna, Madhusudan Mysore Doreswamy, Marchal Bruno
Institute of Public Health, 3009, II-A Main, 17th Cross, KR Road, Siddanna Layout, Banashankari Stage II, Bengaluru, Karnataka, 560070, India.
Vivekananda Girijaya Kalyana Kendra, Biligiriranga Hills, Yelandur Taluk, Chamarajanagar District, Karnataka, 571441, India.
Wellcome Open Res. 2019 Dec 13;4:202. doi: 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.15549.1. eCollection 2019.
In India, heterogenous tribal populations are grouped together under a common category, Scheduled Tribe, for affirmative action. Many tribal communities are closely associated with forests and difficult-to-reach areas and have worse-off health and nutrition indicators. However, poor population health outcomes cannot be explained by geography alone. Social determinants of health, especially various social disadvantages, compound the problem of access and utilisation of health services and undermine their health and nutritional status. The Towards Health Equity and Transformative Action on tribal health (THETA) study has three objectives: (1) describe and analyse extent and patterns of health inequalities, (2) generate theoretical explanations, and (3) pilot an intervention to validate the explanation. For objective 1, we will conduct household surveys in seven forest areas covering 2722 households in five states across India, along a gradient of socio-geographic disadvantage. For objective 2, we will purposefully select case studies illustrating processes through which socio-geographic disadvantages act at the individual, household/neighbourhood, village or population level, paying careful attention to the interactions across various known axes of inequity. We will use a realist evaluation approach with context-mechanism-outcome configurations generated from the wider literature on tribal health and results of objective 1. For objective 3, we will partner with willing stakeholders to design and pilot an equity-enhancing intervention, drawing on the theoretical explanation generated and evaluate it to further refine our final explanatory theory. THETA project seeks to generate site-specific evidence to guide public health policy and programs to better contribute to equitable health in tribal populations. It fulfills the current gap in generating and testing explanatory social theories on the persistent and unfair accumulation of geographical and social disadvantage among tribal populations and finally examines if such approaches could help design equity-enhancing interventions to improve tribal health.
在印度,为了实施平权行动,异质的部落人口被归为一个共同的类别——在册部落。许多部落社区与森林和交通不便的地区紧密相连,其健康和营养指标较差。然而,人口健康状况不佳不能仅用地理位置来解释。健康的社会决定因素,尤其是各种社会劣势,加剧了获得和利用卫生服务的问题,并损害了他们的健康和营养状况。部落健康的健康公平与变革性行动(THETA)研究有三个目标:(1)描述和分析健康不平等的程度和模式;(2)提出理论解释;(3)试点一项干预措施以验证该解释。对于目标1,我们将在印度五个邦的七个森林地区进行家庭调查,涵盖2722户家庭,调查沿着社会地理劣势梯度进行。对于目标2,我们将有目的地选择案例研究,说明社会地理劣势在个人、家庭/邻里、村庄或人口层面发挥作用的过程,同时密切关注各种已知不平等轴之间的相互作用。我们将使用一种现实主义评价方法,结合部落健康的更广泛文献和目标1的结果所产生的背景-机制-结果配置。对于目标3,我们将与愿意合作的利益相关者合作,设计并试点一项增强公平性的干预措施,借鉴所产生的理论解释并对其进行评估,以进一步完善我们的最终解释理论。THETA项目旨在生成特定地点的证据,以指导公共卫生政策和项目,更好地促进部落人口的健康公平。它填补了当前在生成和检验关于部落人口中地理和社会劣势持续且不公平积累的解释性社会理论方面的空白,最终检验这些方法是否有助于设计增强公平性的干预措施以改善部落健康。