Lantagne Daniele, Lehmann Lilian, Yates Travis, Gallandat Karin, Sikder Mustafa, Domini Marta, String Gabrielle
Tufts University School of Engineering, Medford, MA, USA.
Innovations for Poverty Action, New Haven, CT, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2021 Mar 22;21(1):560. doi: 10.1186/s12889-021-10597-z.
Provision of safe water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) to affected populations in humanitarian emergencies is necessary for dignity and communicable disease control. Additional evidence on WASH interventions is needed in humanitarian settings. Between 2008 and 2019, we completed six multi-country, mixed-methods effectiveness studies in humanitarian response on six different WASH interventions. In each evaluation, we conducted: key informant interviews; water point observations and water quality testing; household surveys with recipients, including survey and water quality testing; focus group discussions; and/or, secondary data analysis. The research questions were: "What is the effectiveness of [intervention] in reducing the risk of diarrhea/cholera transmission; and, what programmatic factors lead to higher effectiveness?"
In all six multi-country, mixed-methods evaluations, policy-relevant outcomes were obtained. We found, in our individual research results, that: interventions could reduce the risk of disease in humanitarian contexts; this reduction of risk did not always occur, as there were large ranges in effectiveness; and, implementation factors were crucial to intervention effectiveness. When collaboratively reviewing our research process across evaluations, we found strategies for successfully conducting this research included: 1) working with partners to identify and evaluate programs; 2) rapidly obtaining approvals to deploy; and, 3) conducting research methodologies consistently. Personal connections, in-person communication, trust, and experience working together were key factors for success in identifying partners for evaluation. Successes in evaluation deployment occurred with flexibility, patience, commitment of adequate time, and understanding of processes; although we note access and security concerns in insecure contexts precluded deployment. Consistent and robust protocols, flexibility, and a consistent researcher on the ground in each context allowed for methodological consistency and high-quality results.
In conclusion, we have found multi-country, mixed-methods results to be one crucial piece of the WASH evidence base in humanitarian contexts. This is particularly because evaluations of reductions in risk from real-world programming are policy-relevant, and are directly used to improve programming. In future, we need to flexibly work with donors, agencies, institutions, responders, local governments, local responders, and beneficiaries to design safe and ethical research protocols to answer questions related to WASH interventions effectiveness in humanitarian response, and, improve WASH programming.
在人道主义紧急情况下,为受影响人群提供安全的水、环境卫生和个人卫生服务(WASH)对于维护尊严和控制传染病至关重要。在人道主义环境中,需要更多关于WASH干预措施的证据。2008年至2019年期间,我们在人道主义应对中完成了六项关于六种不同WASH干预措施的多国、混合方法有效性研究。在每次评估中,我们进行了:关键信息访谈;取水点观察和水质检测;对受援者的家庭调查,包括调查和水质检测;焦点小组讨论;和/或二次数据分析。研究问题是:“[干预措施]在降低腹泻/霍乱传播风险方面的有效性如何;以及,哪些方案因素导致更高的有效性?”
在所有六项多国、混合方法评估中,都获得了与政策相关的结果。我们在各自的研究结果中发现:干预措施可以降低人道主义背景下的疾病风险;这种风险降低并非总是发生,因为有效性存在很大差异;而且,实施因素对干预效果至关重要。在对各项评估的研究过程进行协作审查时,我们发现成功开展这项研究的策略包括:1)与合作伙伴合作识别和评估项目;2)迅速获得部署批准;3)始终如一地采用研究方法。个人关系、面对面沟通、信任以及共同工作的经验是成功识别评估合作伙伴的关键因素。评估部署的成功得益于灵活性、耐心、投入足够的时间以及对流程的理解;尽管我们注意到在不安全环境中,获取信息和安全问题妨碍了部署。一致且稳健的方案、灵活性以及在每个环境中有一名始终如一的实地研究人员,确保了方法的一致性和高质量的结果。
总之,我们发现多国、混合方法的结果是人道主义背景下WASH证据基础的关键组成部分。这尤其因为对实际项目中风险降低情况的评估与政策相关,并且直接用于改进项目。未来,我们需要灵活地与捐助者、机构、组织、应对者、地方政府、当地应对者和受益者合作,设计安全且符合道德规范的研究方案,以回答与人道主义应对中WASH干预措施有效性相关的问题,并改进WASH项目。