Mills Thomas, Evans Jo, Jenkins Catherine L, Grimes James, Reavey Paula, Wills Jane, Sykes Susie
PHIRST South Bank, London South Bank University, UK.
Greater Manchester Combined Authority, UK.
Glob Health Promot. 2024 Nov 24:17579759241293453. doi: 10.1177/17579759241293453.
Communities of Practice (CoPs) are increasingly used in health and non-health sectors globally. Evidence suggests that CoPs can support health promotion activities, but the research mainly encompasses formal, professional contexts: the role and contribution of CoPs in community-centred health promotion has not been explored. This paper presents a process evaluation of a CoP that aimed to facilitate social innovation among voluntary, community, faith and social enterprise (VCFSE) organisations. Hosted by a city-region government in England, VCFSE organisations were invited to join a CoP to enable the development and implementation of their ideas for addressing gambling harms.
The process evaluation sought to develop mid-level programme theory for the use of CoPs in community-centred health promotion. Data collection consisted of 33 qualitative interviews with stakeholders, as well as project reporting. Data were organised using a framework approach which supported the construction of themes and a complex intervention model. The research team reflected on these to develop the programme theory.
The CoP facilitated the development of community-centred interventions for addressing gambling harms through a two-track process: first, a community of VCFSE staff was formed, whose understanding of gambling harms was nurtured through discussions led by people with Lived Experience; second, the CoP contributed to project development via collaboration, knowledge sharing and an integrated referral pathway, although project-level benefits were uneven. Learning was generated in community engagement, training, education, support and social campaigns.
The findings confirm the combined effectiveness of a CoP, varied VCFSE projects and people with Lived Experience to co-create an evolving knowledge-base for a city-region government's gambling harms reduction strategy. CoPs may therefore complement partnership working in community settings, although additional training support may be required in comparison with CoPs involving health professionals. The city-region government's approach could be replicated in other emerging public health areas.
实践社区(CoPs)在全球卫生和非卫生部门的应用日益广泛。有证据表明,实践社区能够支持健康促进活动,但相关研究主要集中在正式的专业背景下:实践社区在以社区为中心的健康促进中的作用和贡献尚未得到探讨。本文介绍了一个实践社区的过程评估,该实践社区旨在促进志愿、社区、信仰和社会企业(VCFSE)组织之间的社会创新。由英国一个城市地区政府主办,邀请VCFSE组织加入一个实践社区,以推动其解决赌博危害的想法的发展和实施。
该过程评估旨在为实践社区在以社区为中心的健康促进中的应用开发中层项目理论。数据收集包括对利益相关者进行的33次定性访谈以及项目报告。使用框架方法对数据进行组织,该方法支持主题构建和复杂干预模型。研究团队对此进行反思以发展项目理论。
该实践社区通过双轨流程促进了以社区为中心的解决赌博危害干预措施的发展:首先,形成了一个由VCFSE工作人员组成的社区,通过有亲身经历者主导的讨论培养他们对赌博危害的理解;其次,该实践社区通过合作、知识共享和综合转诊途径为项目发展做出了贡献,尽管项目层面的收益并不均衡。在社区参与、培训、教育、支持和社会宣传活动中产生了学习成果。
研究结果证实了实践社区、多样化的VCFSE项目和有亲身经历者共同作用的综合有效性,为城市地区政府的减少赌博危害战略共同创造了一个不断发展的知识库。因此,实践社区可能会补充社区环境中的伙伴关系工作,尽管与涉及卫生专业人员的实践社区相比,可能需要额外的培训支持。城市地区政府的方法可以在其他新兴公共卫生领域复制。