Professor, Division of Health Research, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK.
Senior Research Associate, Division of Health Research, Lancaster University, Bailrigg, Lancaster LA1 4YE, UK.
Perspect Public Health. 2022 Jul;142(4):213-223. doi: 10.1177/17579139221106899. Epub 2022 Jul 8.
This article seeks to make the case for a new approach to understanding and nurturing resilience as a foundation for effective place-based co-produced local action on social and health inequalities.
A narrative review of literature on from a public health perspective was conducted and a new concept of was developed. This then shaped the development of a practical programme of action research implemented in nine socio-economically disadvantaged neighbourhoods in North West England between 2014 and 2019. This Neighbourhood Resilience Programme (NRP) was evaluated using a mixed-method design comprising: (1) a longitudinal household survey, conducted in each of the Neighbourhoods For Learning (NFLs) and in nine comparator areas in two waves (2015/2016 and 2018/2019) and completed in each phase by approximately 3000 households; (2) reflexive journals kept by the academic team; and (3) semi-structured interviews on perceptions about the impacts of the programme with 41 participants in 2019.
A difference-in-difference analysis of household survey data showed a statistically significant increase of 7.5% (95% confidence interval (CI), 1.6 to 13.5) in the percentage of residents reporting that they felt able to influence local decision-making in the NFLs relative to the residents in comparator areas, but no effect attributable to the NRP in other evaluative measures. The analysis of participant interviews identified beneficial impacts of the NRP in five resilience domains: social connectivity, cultural coherence, local decision-making, economic activity, and the local environment.
Our findings support the need for a shift away from interventions that seek solely to enhance the resilience of lay communities to interventions that recognise resilience as a whole systems phenomenon. Systemic approaches to resilience can provide the underpinning foundation for effective co-produced local action on social and health inequalities, but they require intensive relational work by all participating system players.
本文旨在倡导一种新方法,从公共卫生的角度理解和培养韧性,以此作为基于地点的、共同制定的地方行动的基础,以解决社会和健康不平等问题。
对从公共卫生角度出发的韧性文献进行了叙述性综述,并提出了一个新的概念,即“邻里韧性”。这一概念随后塑造了一个实际的行动研究方案的发展,该方案于 2014 年至 2019 年在英格兰西北部 9 个社会经济处于不利地位的社区实施。该邻里韧性计划(NRP)采用混合方法设计进行评估,包括:(1)在每个邻里学习区(NFL)和两个波次的 9 个对照区(2015/2016 年和 2018/2019 年)进行了一项纵向家庭调查,每个阶段约有 3000 户家庭完成;(2)学术团队保存的反思性期刊;以及(3)2019 年对 41 名参与者进行的关于对该计划影响的看法的半结构化访谈。
家庭调查数据的差异分析显示,在 NFL 区报告自己能够影响当地决策的居民比例与对照区居民相比,增加了 7.5%(95%置信区间(CI),1.6 至 13.5),具有统计学意义,但在其他评估指标中,NRP 没有效果。对参与者访谈的分析确定了 NRP 在五个韧性领域的有益影响:社会联系、文化一致性、地方决策、经济活动和当地环境。
我们的研究结果支持需要从仅寻求增强社区韧性的干预措施转向承认韧性是一个整体系统现象的干预措施。韧性的系统方法可以为基于地点的、共同制定的地方行动提供有效的社会和健康不平等问题的基础,但需要所有参与系统的参与者进行密集的关系工作。