Hunt Xanthe, Saran Ashrita, Banks Lena Morgon, White Howard, Kuper Hannah
Institute for Life Course Health Research, Department of Global Health Stellenbosch University Stellenbosch South Africa.
Campbell Collaboration Vasant Kunj India.
Campbell Syst Rev. 2022 Jun 30;18(3):e1257. doi: 10.1002/cl2.1257. eCollection 2022 Sep.
People with disabilities-more than a billion people worldwide-are frequently excluded from livelihood opportunities, including employment, social protection, and access to finance. Interventions are therefore needed to improve livelihood outcomes for people with disabilities, such as improving access to financial capital (e.g., social protection), human capital (e.g., health and education/training), social capital (e.g., support) or physical capital (e.g., accessible buildings). However, evidence is lacking as to which approaches should be promoted.
This review examines whether interventions for people with disabilities result in improved livelihood outcomes in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC): acquisition of skills for the workplace, access to the job market, employment in formal and informal sectors, income and earnings from work, access to financial services such as grants and loans, and/or access to social protection programmes.
The search, up to date as of February 2020, comprised of: (1)an electronic search of databases (MEDLINE, Embase, PsychINFO, CAB Global Health, ERIC, PubMED and CINAHL),(2)screening of all included studies in the instances where reviews were identified,(3)screening reference lists and citations of identified recent papers and reviews, and(4)An electronic search of a range of organisational websites and databases (including ILO, R4D, UNESCO and WHO) using the keyword search for unpublished grey to ensure maximum coverage of unpublished literature, and reduce the potential for publication bias.
We included all studies which reported on impact evaluations of interventions to improve livelihood outcomes for people with disabilities in LMIC.
We used review management software EPPI Reviewer to screen the search results. A total of 10 studies were identified as meeting the inclusion criteria. We searched for errata for our included publications and found none. Two review authors independently extracted the data from each study report, including for the confidence in study findings appraisal. Data and information were extracted regarding available characteristics of participants, intervention characteristics and control conditions, research design, sample size, risk of bias and outcomes, and results. We found that it was not possible to conduct a meta-analysis, and generate pooled results or compare effect sizes, given the diversity of designs, methodologies, measures, and rigour across studies in this area. As such, we presented out findings narratively.
Only one of the nine interventions targeted children with disabilities alone, and only two included a mix of age groups (children and adults with disabilities. Most of the interventions targeted adults with disabilities only. Most single impairment group interventions targeted people with physical impairments alone. The research designs of the studies included one randomised controlled trial, one quasi-randomised controlled trial (a randomised, posttest only study using propensity score matching (PSM), one case-control study with PSM, four uncontrolled before and after studies, and three posttest only studies. Our confidence in the overall findings is low to medium on the basis of our appraisal of the studies. Two studies scored medium using our assessment tool, with the remaining eight scoring low on one or more item. All the included studies reported positive impacts on livelihoods outcomes. However, outcomes varied substantially by study, as did the methods used to establish intervention impact, and the quality and reporting of findings.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The findings of this review suggest that it may be possible for a variety of programming approaches to improve livelihood outcomes of people with disabilities in LMIC. However, given low confidence in study findings related to methodological limitations in all the included studies, positive findings must be interpreted with caution. Additional rigorous evaluations of livelihoods interventions for people with disabilities in LMIC are needed.
全球有超过10亿残疾人常常被排除在生计机会之外,包括就业、社会保护和获得金融服务的机会。因此,需要采取干预措施来改善残疾人的生计成果,比如增加获得金融资本(如社会保护)、人力资本(如健康和教育/培训)、社会资本(如支持)或物质资本(如无障碍建筑)的机会。然而,对于应推广哪种方法,目前还缺乏证据。
本综述探讨在低收入和中等收入国家(LMIC),针对残疾人的干预措施是否能改善其生计成果,包括获得工作场所技能、进入就业市场、在正规和非正规部门就业、工作收入和收益、获得赠款和贷款等金融服务,以及/或者获得社会保护项目。
截至2020年2月的检索包括:(1)对数据库(MEDLINE、Embase、PsychINFO、CAB全球健康、ERIC、PubMED和CINAHL)进行电子检索;(2)在已识别的综述实例中筛选所有纳入研究;(3)筛选已识别的近期论文和综述的参考文献列表及引用文献;(4)使用关键词搜索一系列组织网站和数据库(包括国际劳工组织、发展研究促进发展组织、联合国教科文组织和世界卫生组织),以检索未发表的灰色文献,确保未发表文献的最大覆盖范围,并减少发表偏倚的可能性。
我们纳入了所有报告了在低收入和中等收入国家对改善残疾人生计成果干预措施的影响评估的研究。
我们使用综述管理软件EPPI Reviewer筛选检索结果。共识别出10项符合纳入标准的研究。我们搜索了纳入出版物的勘误表,未发现任何勘误。两位综述作者独立从每项研究报告中提取数据,包括对研究结果评估的可信度。提取了关于参与者的可用特征、干预特征和对照条件、研究设计、样本量、偏倚风险和结果等方面的数据和信息。我们发现,鉴于该领域研究在设计、方法、测量和严谨性方面存在多样性,无法进行荟萃分析、生成汇总结果或比较效应大小。因此,我们以叙述的方式呈现研究结果。
九项干预措施中只有一项仅针对残疾儿童,只有两项涵盖了不同年龄组(残疾儿童和成人)。大多数干预措施仅针对成年残疾人。大多数单一损伤组干预措施仅针对身体有损伤的人。研究的设计包括一项随机对照试验、一项准随机对照试验(一项使用倾向得分匹配(PSM)的仅后测随机研究)、一项采用PSM的病例对照研究、四项无对照的前后研究以及三项仅后测研究。基于我们对这些研究的评估,我们对总体研究结果的信心为低到中等。两项研究使用我们的评估工具得分中等,其余八项在一个或多个项目上得分较低。所有纳入研究均报告了对生计成果的积极影响。然而,不同研究的结果差异很大,用于确定干预影响的方法、研究结果的质量和报告情况也各不相同。
本综述的结果表明,各种方案方法可能有助于改善低收入和中等收入国家残疾人士的生计成果。然而,鉴于所有纳入研究在方法上存在局限性,对研究结果的信心较低,因此对积极结果必须谨慎解读。需要对低收入和中等收入国家针对残疾人士的生计干预措施进行更多严格评估。