Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Gender and Health Research Unit, South African Medical Research Council, Cape Town, South Af.
J Glob Health. 2020 Jun;10(1):010406. doi: 10.7189/jogh.10.010406.
There is considerable interest in community organising and activism as a strategy to shift patriarchal gender norms, attitudes and beliefs and thus reduce intimate partner violence (IPV). Yet there is limited insight into how activism actually translates into reduced violence, including how aspects of programme implementation or cultural context may affect impact. This study evaluates the community activism/mobilisation portion of a, a multi-component, IPV prevention programme implemented in rural Rwanda. The activism part of was based on , a promising program model from Uganda with demonstrated effectiveness.
We implemented two separate cross-sectional surveys as part of a larger community randomised controlled trial to assess the impact of the community portion of on preventing physical and/or sexual IPV and other secondary outcomes at a community level. The survey consisted of a random household-based sample of 1400 women and 1400 men at both waves. Surveys were conducted before community-level activities commenced and were repeated 24 months later with a new cross-sectional sample. Longitudinal, qualitative data were collected as part of an embedded process evaluation.
There was no evidence of an intervention effect at a community level on any of the trial's primary or secondary outcomes, most notably women's experience of physical and/or sexual IPV from a current male partner in the past 12 months (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 1.25; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.92-1.70, = 0.16), or men's perpetration of male-to-female physical and/or sexual IPV (aOR = 1.02; 95% CI = 0.72-1.45, = 0.89). Process evaluation data suggest that delays due to challenges in adapting and implementing -style activites in rural Rwanda may account for the trial's failure to measure an effect. Additionally, the intervention strategy of informal activism was not well suited to the Rwandan context and required considerable modification.
Failure to reduce violence when implementing an adaptation of in rural Rwanda highlights the importance of allowing sufficient time for adapting evidence-based programming (EBP) to ensure cultural appropriateness and fidelity. This evaluation held little chance of demonstrating impact since the project timeline forced endline evaluation only months after certain elements of the programme became operational. Donors must anticipate longer time horizons (5 to 7 years) when contemplating evaluations of novel or newly-adapted programmess for reducing IPV at a population level. These findings also reinforce the value of including embedded process evaluations when investing in rigorous trials of complex phenomena such as community activism.
ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03477877.
社区组织和行动主义作为一种改变父权制性别规范、态度和信仰从而减少亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)的策略,引起了相当大的兴趣。然而,对于行动主义如何实际转化为减少暴力的实际情况,包括方案实施的某些方面或文化背景如何影响影响,人们了解甚少。本研究评估了在卢旺达农村实施的多成分 IPV 预防方案中的一个部分,即社区行动主义/动员部分。的社区行动主义部分基于来自乌干达的一种很有前途的方案模式,该模式已被证明具有有效性。
我们实施了两项单独的横断面调查,作为一项更大的社区随机对照试验的一部分,以评估社区部分对预防身体和/或性 IPV 以及其他二级结局的影响,这是在社区层面进行的。该调查由两个波次的 1400 名妇女和 1400 名男子的随机家庭为基础的样本组成。在社区层面活动开始之前进行了调查,并在 24 个月后使用新的横断面样本进行了重复调查。作为嵌入式过程评估的一部分,还收集了纵向定性数据。
在社区一级,没有证据表明干预对试验的任何主要或次要结局有影响,特别是在过去 12 个月中女性从现任男性伴侣那里经历的身体和/或性 IPV(调整后的优势比(aOR)=1.25;95%置信区间(CI)=0.92-1.70,=0.16),或男性对女性身体和/或性 IPV 的实施(aOR=1.02;95%CI=0.72-1.45,=0.89)。过程评估数据表明,由于在卢旺达农村适应和实施 -style 活动的挑战而导致的延迟,可能导致试验未能衡量效果。此外,非正式行动主义的干预策略不太适合卢旺达的情况,需要进行大量修改。
在卢旺达农村实施的 改编版未能减少暴力,这凸显了为确保文化适宜性和保真度而适当调整基于证据的方案(EBP)所需的足够时间的重要性。由于项目时间表迫使项目在某些方案内容开始运作后的几个月内进行最终评估,因此该评估几乎没有机会证明效果。当考虑为减少人口层面的 IPV 而对新的或新改编的方案进行评估时,捐助者必须预计到更长的时间框架(5 到 7 年)。这些发现还加强了在对社区行动主义等复杂现象进行严格试验时纳入嵌入式过程评估的价值。
ClinicalTrials.gov,NCT03477877。