Kavanagh Shane A, Hawe Penelope, Shiell Alan, Mallman Mark, Garvey Kate
School of Health & Social Development, Faculty of Health, Deakin University, Geelong, Victoria, Australia.
The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre, 1240, Haymarket, New South Wales, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Mar 2;22(1):420. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-12788-8.
The mechanisms typically used to fund health promotion in communities, either as part of an effort to scale-up programs or to support the design of local activities, often pay insufficient attention to the foundational means of enhancing well-being. Only recently have researchers begun to critically 'unpack' how funding processes connect with and activate local community capacities.
We conducted a thematic analysis of 33 interviews with policy and program administrators in public health and local community workers and volunteers. We invited them to expound on their understandings of resources - specifically, what needs to be in place to make funded programs successful and/or what do communities draw on to make funded programs effective.
Policy and program administrators reflected mostly on the importance of traditional resources, such as adequate funding and staffing. Community-based participants often went further to describe psychological and sociological resources - the "soft infrastructure" which included trust and hope. Both groups emphasised the importance of building networks and relationships at multiple levels. Community workers also provided examples of how resources grow and improve in value in combination with other processes or through pathways of resource use or resource distribution. So, resources like information/knowledge are made more valuable when relayed locally. Physical amenities (e.g., meeting spaces, kitchens) have an instrumental role, but also act powerfully as a symbolic resource for identity. Participants reported that funding processes can damage the resources required for community health improvement. Funding instability undermines capacity. The ongoing threat of funding removal was described by one administrator as community "bullying".
Processes of health promotion funding, and even standard processes of program scale-up and readiness assessment, risk underestimating the range of resources that are fundamental for community health improvement, particularly among disadvantaged communities. Funders should design ways to resource communities so that there is constant attention to and coaching of critically important diverse processes of resource growth, independent of program-specific funds.
社区健康促进的典型资助机制,无论是作为扩大项目规模努力的一部分,还是支持当地活动的设计,往往对增进福祉的基础手段关注不足。直到最近,研究人员才开始批判性地“剖析”资助过程如何与当地社区能力相联系并激活这些能力。
我们对33名公共卫生政策与项目管理人员、当地社区工作者及志愿者进行了访谈,并开展了主题分析。我们邀请他们阐述对资源的理解——具体而言,为使受资助项目取得成功需要具备哪些条件,以及社区利用哪些资源来使受资助项目发挥成效。
政策与项目管理人员大多强调传统资源的重要性,如充足的资金和人员配备。基于社区的参与者则往往进一步描述心理和社会资源——包括信任和希望在内的“软基础设施”。两组人员都强调了在多个层面建立网络和关系的重要性。社区工作者还举例说明了资源如何通过与其他过程相结合,或通过资源使用或资源分配途径而增值和改善。例如,信息/知识等资源在本地传播时会变得更有价值。实体设施(如会议空间、厨房)不仅具有工具性作用,还作为身份认同的象征性资源发挥着强大作用。参与者报告称,资助过程可能会损害社区健康改善所需的资源。资金不稳定会削弱能力。一位管理人员将持续存在的资金撤销威胁描述为对社区的“霸凌”。
健康促进资助过程,甚至项目扩大规模和准备情况评估的标准流程,都有可能低估对社区健康改善至关重要的资源范围,尤其是在弱势社区中。资助者应设计为社区提供资源的方式,以便持续关注并指导资源增长的各种至关重要的不同过程,而不依赖于特定项目资金。