Butura Ana-Maria, Ryan Grace K, Shakespeare Tom, Ogunmola Olusegun, Omobowale Olubukola, Greenley Rachel, Eaton Julian
Department of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, Kings College London, 16 De Crespigny Park, London, SE5 8AB, UK.
Department of Population Health, Centre for Global Mental Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London, WC1E 7HT, UK.
Int J Ment Health Syst. 2024 Mar 14;18(1):13. doi: 10.1186/s13033-024-00630-0.
Community based rehabilitation (CBR) aims to promote the inclusion and participation of people with disabilities, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Yet people with psychosocial disabilities are often excluded from CBR programmes. The restrictive inclusion criteria used by previous reviews make it difficult to identify promising examples that could otherwise help to inform the uptake of CBR for people with psychosocial disabilities. We aim to address this gap using gold standard methods for the review and synthesis of grey literature on CBR for people with psychosocial disabilities in LMICs.
Our search strategy was developed in consultation with an expert advisory group and covered seven grey literature databases, two customised Google Advanced searches, 34 targeted websites and four key reports. A single reviewer screened the search results and extracted relevant data using a standardised format based on the World Health Organisation's CBR matrix. The included programmes were then checked by a second reviewer with experience in CBR to ensure they met the review's criteria. A narrative synthesis with summative content analysis was performed to synthesise the findings.
The 23 CBR programmes identified for inclusion spanned 19 countries and were mostly located in either rural areas or urban areas where a large proportion of the population was living in poverty. 13 were classified as livelihood programmes, eight as empowerment programmes, seven as social programmes, seven as health programmes and four as education programmes. Only two addressed all five of these components. 12 of the included programmes reported challenges to implementation, with stigma and lack of resources emerging as two of the most prominent themes.
This grey literature review identified several CBR programmes and synthesised key learning that would have otherwise been missed by a more traditional review of the published literature. However, as evaluation by implementing organisations is not always conducted to a high standard, the quality of this evidence is generally poor. A flexible monitoring and evaluation framework for CBR programmes could help to reduce heterogeneity in terms of the quality and content of reporting.
基于社区的康复(CBR)旨在促进残疾人的包容与参与,尤其是在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)。然而,社会心理残疾者往往被排除在CBR项目之外。以往综述所采用的严格纳入标准使得难以识别出有前景的案例,而这些案例原本有助于为社会心理残疾者采用CBR提供参考。我们旨在运用金标准方法,对LMICs中针对社会心理残疾者的CBR灰色文献进行综述和综合分析,以填补这一空白。
我们的检索策略是在与一个专家咨询小组协商后制定的,涵盖了七个灰色文献数据库、两个定制的谷歌高级搜索、34个目标网站和四份关键报告。由一名评审员筛选检索结果,并使用基于世界卫生组织CBR矩阵的标准化格式提取相关数据。然后由另一位有CBR经验的评审员检查纳入的项目,以确保它们符合综述标准。进行了带有总结性内容分析的叙述性综合分析,以综合研究结果。
确定纳入的23个CBR项目分布在19个国家,大多位于农村地区或贫困人口占很大比例的城市地区。13个被归类为生计项目,8个为赋权项目,7个为社会项目,7个为健康项目,4个为教育项目。只有两个项目涵盖了所有这五个组成部分。纳入的项目中有12个报告了实施过程中的挑战,耻辱感和资源匮乏是最突出的两个主题。
这项灰色文献综述识别出了几个CBR项目,并综合了关键经验教训,而这些在对已发表文献进行更传统的综述时可能会被遗漏。然而,由于实施组织的评估并非总是高标准进行,这些证据的质量总体较差。一个灵活的CBR项目监测和评估框架有助于减少报告质量和内容方面的异质性。