Values & Sustainability Research Group, School of Architecture, Technology and Engineering, University of Brighton, Brighton, UK.
Department of Environmental Science and Engineering, Fudan University, Shanghai, People's Republic of China.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Apr 9;24(1):987. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-18485-y.
International development work involves external partners bringing expertise, resources, and management for local interventions in LMICs, but there is often a gap in understandings of relevant local shared values. There is a widespread need to better design interventions which accommodate relevant elements of local culture, as emphasised by recent discussions in global health research regarding neo-colonialism. One recent innovation is the concept of producing 'cultural protocols' to precede and guide community engagement or intervention design, but without suggestions for generating them. This study explores and demonstrates the potential of an approach taken from another field, named WeValue InSitu, to generate local culturally-informed protocols. WeValue InSitu engages stakeholder groups in meaning-making processes which 'crystallize' their envelope of local shared values, making them communicable to outsiders.Our research context is understanding and reducing child stunting, including developing interventions, carried out at the Senegal and Indonesia sites of the UKRI GCRF Action Against Stunting Hub. Each national research team involves eight health disciplines from micro-nutrition to epigenetics, and extensive collection of samples and questionnaires. Local culturally-informed protocols would be generally valuable to pre-inform engagement and intervention designs. Here we explore generating them by immediately following the group WeValue InSitu crystallization process with specialised focus group discussions exploring: what local life practices potentially have significant influence on the environments affecting child stunting, and which cultural elements do they highlight as relevant. The discussions will be framed by the shared values, and reveal linkages to them. In this study, stakeholder groups like fathers, mothers, teachers, market traders, administrators, farmers and health workers were recruited, totalling 83 participants across 20 groups. Themes found relevant for a culturally-informed protocol for locally-acceptable food interventions included: specific gender roles; social hierarchies; health service access challenges; traditional beliefs around malnutrition; and attitudes to accepting outside help. The concept of a grounded culturally-informed protocol, and the use of WeValue InSitu to generate it, has thus been demonstrated here. Future work to scope out the advantages and limitations compared to deductive culture studies, and to using other formative research methods would now be useful.
国际发展工作涉及外部合作伙伴为中低收入国家的本地干预带来专业知识、资源和管理,但他们往往对相关的本地共同价值观缺乏理解。最近全球健康研究中关于新殖民主义的讨论强调,人们普遍需要更好地设计适应当地文化相关要素的干预措施。最近的一项创新是提出了“文化协议”的概念,以指导社区参与或干预措施的设计,但没有提出生成这些协议的建议。本研究探索并展示了一种来自另一个领域的方法的潜力,该方法称为 WeValue InSitu,用于生成具有当地文化意识的协议。WeValue InSitu 使利益相关者群体参与意义建构过程,“使”他们的本地共同价值观范围具体化,使这些价值观能够被外部人士理解。我们的研究背景是了解和减少儿童发育迟缓,包括在英国研究与创新署 GCRF 减少发育迟缓中心的塞内加尔和印度尼西亚站点开展干预措施,每个国家的研究团队都涉及从微量营养素到表观遗传学的八个健康学科,并广泛收集样本和问卷。当地文化知情协议对于预先告知参与和干预设计将是非常有价值的。在这里,我们通过立即跟随 WeValue InSitu 结晶过程,进行专门的焦点小组讨论来探索生成它们,讨论内容包括:哪些当地生活实践可能对影响儿童发育迟缓的环境产生重大影响,以及它们强调了哪些文化元素。讨论将以共同价值观为框架,并揭示与它们的联系。在这项研究中,招募了父亲、母亲、教师、市场商人、管理人员、农民和卫生工作者等利益相关者群体,总共 20 个小组有 83 名参与者。发现与当地可接受的食物干预措施相关的文化知情协议的主题包括:特定的性别角色;社会等级制度;获得卫生服务的挑战;传统的营养不良观念;以及对接受外部帮助的态度。因此,这里展示了一个基于实地的文化知情协议的概念,以及使用 WeValue InSitu 生成它的过程。现在,进一步研究与演绎文化研究相比的优势和局限性,以及使用其他形成性研究方法将是有用的。