Morrison Joanna, Pires Malini, Ahmed Sarker Ashraf Uddin, King Carina, Jeny Tasnova Jerin, Hossin Raduan, Nahar Tasmin, Ahmed Naveed, Shaha Sanjit, Haghparast-Bidgoli Hassan, Kuddus Abdul, Azad Kishwar, Fottrell Edward
Institute for Global Health, University College London, London, UK
Institute for Global Health, University College London, London, UK.
BMJ Open. 2025 Apr 3;15(4):e089288. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-089288.
Research indicates the effectiveness of participatory interventions to address rapid rises in type 2 diabetes in low-income countries. Understanding their transferability to different contexts is a priority. We aimed to analyse how the COVID-19 post-lockdown context and adjustments to a participatory learning and action intervention affected theorised mechanisms of effect in rural Bangladesh and to examine the broader implications of this context and intervention adjustments for developing optimal contexts for participatory interventions.
Mixed methods using longitudinal qualitative and quantitative observation data, focus group discussions and interviews with group and community members and project personnel. We used descriptive content analysis, guided by realist evaluation research questions about context, implementation and mechanisms. We used team reflection to enhance the rigour of our analysis.
Cluster-randomised trial in Alfadanga upazila, Faridpur district, in the central region of Bangladesh. The intervention was implemented between January 2020 and December 2022, during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Participatory group members, community members and project personnel (n=32). Structured observations of participatory groups (n=1820) and unstructured observations of groups and their environments (n=15).
Participatory learning and action community groups of men and women implemented by community-based facilitators.
Due to COVID-19, the participatory learning and action (PLA) intervention was not implemented as planned, which had major effects on the time available to develop the intervention with communities. Communities learnt about diabetes and were motivated to address its causes at an individual level, but community action was a more challenging mechanism to trigger. The post-pandemic context made it difficult to build community rapport, and strategies to engage communities through home visits were challenging. Communities' prior negative experience in working together and in working with non-governmental organisations led to low community cohesion and low motivation to address diabetes collectively. This also resulted in expectations that the implementing organisation would implement community actions and incentivise attendance at meetings. This misalignment of expectations further disabled relationship building, and community strategies addressing the social causes of diabetes were largely not enacted.
PLA has optimal effects when time is available to build trust and social cohesion. These are contextual elements and mechanisms that need to be activated to enable critical reflection and community action to develop an enabling environment to address type 2 diabetes.
ISRCTN42219712.
研究表明,参与式干预措施对于解决低收入国家2型糖尿病快速上升问题具有有效性。了解这些措施在不同背景下的可转移性是当务之急。我们旨在分析新冠疫情解封后的背景以及对一项参与式学习与行动干预措施的调整如何影响孟加拉国农村地区的理论作用机制,并探讨这一背景和干预措施调整对于营造参与式干预最佳环境的更广泛影响。
采用混合方法,运用纵向定性和定量观察数据、焦点小组讨论以及与团体和社区成员及项目人员的访谈。我们以关于背景、实施和机制的现实主义评价研究问题为指导,进行描述性内容分析。我们运用团队反思来提高分析的严谨性。
在孟加拉国中部地区法里德布尔县阿尔法丹加乡进行的整群随机试验。该干预措施于2020年1月至2022年12月新冠疫情期间实施。
参与式团体成员、社区成员和项目人员(n = 32)。对参与式团体进行结构化观察(n = 1820),对团体及其环境进行非结构化观察(n = 15)。
由社区促进者实施的男女参与式学习与行动社区团体。
由于新冠疫情,参与式学习与行动(PLA)干预措施未能按计划实施,这对与社区共同制定干预措施的可用时间产生了重大影响。社区了解了糖尿病,并在个人层面有动力解决其成因,但触发社区行动是一个更具挑战性的机制。疫情后的背景使得建立社区融洽关系变得困难,通过家访让社区参与的策略也颇具挑战性。社区此前在共同工作以及与非政府组织合作方面的负面经历导致社区凝聚力低,集体应对糖尿病的积极性不高。这也导致人们期望实施组织会采取社区行动并激励人们参加会议。这种期望的错位进一步阻碍了关系的建立,解决糖尿病社会成因的社区策略基本上没有得到实施。
当有时间建立信任和社会凝聚力时,PLA会产生最佳效果。这些是需要激活的背景要素和机制,以便进行批判性反思和社区行动,从而营造一个应对2型糖尿病的有利环境。
ISRCTN42219712