| Literature DB >> 24876076 |
Michael Loevinsohn1, Lyla Mehta2, Katie Cuming3, Alan Nicol2, Oliver Cumming3, Jeroen H J Ensink3.
Abstract
Divisions between communities, disciplinary and practice, impede understanding of how complex interventions in health and other sectors actually work and slow the development and spread of more effective ones. We test this hypothesis by re-reviewing a Cochrane-standard systematic review (SR) of water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) interventions' impact on child diarrhoea morbidity: can greater understanding of impacts and how they are achieved be gained when the same papers are reviewed jointly from health and development perspectives? Using realist review methods, researchers examined the 27 papers for evidence of other impact pathways operating than assumed in the papers and SR. Evidence relating to four questions was judged on a scale of likelihood. At the 'more than possible' or 'likely' level, 22% of interventions were judged to involve substantially more actions than the SR's label indicated; 37% resulted in substantial additional impacts, beyond reduced diarrhoea morbidity; and unforeseen actions by individuals, households or communities substantially contributed to the impacts in 48% of studies. In 44%, it was judged that these additional impacts and actions would have substantially affected the intervention's effect on diarrhoea morbidity. The prevalence of these impacts and actions might well be found greater in studies not so narrowly selected. We identify six impact pathways suggested by these studies that were not considered by the SR: these are tentative, given the limitations of the literature we reviewed, but may help stimulate wider review and primary evaluation efforts. This re-review offers a fuller understanding of the impacts of these interventions and how they are produced, pointing to several ways in which investments might enhance health and wellbeing. It suggests that some conclusions of the SR and earlier reviews should be reconsidered. Moreover, it contributes important experience to the continuing debate on appropriate methods to evaluate and synthesize evidence on complex interventions. Published by Oxford University Press in association with The London School of Hygiene and Tropical MedicineEntities:
Keywords: Diarrhoea; hygiene; multiple benefits; realist review; sanitation; water supply
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24876076 PMCID: PMC4421832 DOI: 10.1093/heapol/czu039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Policy Plan ISSN: 0268-1080 Impact factor: 3.344
Figure 1Water treatment, sanitation and hygiene barriers to disease transmission (Waddington and Snilstveit 2009). Reprinted by permission of the publisher (Taylor & Francis Ltd, http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals).
Reassessment of studies from the Waddington review
| Is the intervention substantially more complex than considered by the Waddington review? | Are impacts substantially understated if only diarrhoea outcome is considered? | Are actions by individuals, households or communities substantially influencing the benefits and harms experienced? | Would these other impacts and actions substantially affect the level, distribution or sustainability of the diarrhoea outcome? | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 (18.5) | 6 (22.2) | 5 (18.5) | 5 (18.5) | |
| 1 (3.7) | 4 (14.8) | 8 (29.6) | 7 (25.9) | |
| 4 (14.8) | 1 (3.7) | 3 (11.1) | 4 (14.8) | |
| 17 (63.0) | 16 (59.3) | 11 (40.7) | 11 (40.7) |
Note: N = 27. Data are number (%).
Reassessment of hygiene interventions in the Waddington review: prevalence of affirmative judgments at the ‘more than possible’ or ‘likely’ level
| Is the intervention substantially more complex than considered by the Waddington review? | Are impacts substantially understated if only diarrhoea outcome is considered? | Are actions by individuals, households or communities substantially influencing the benefits and harms experienced? | Would these other impacts and actions substantially affect the level, distribution or sustainability of the diarrhoea outcome? | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 (15.4) | 2 (15.4) | 4 (30.8) | 4 (30.8) | |
| 4 (28.6) | 8 (57.1) | 9 (64.3) | 8 (57.1) |
Note: Data are number (%).
Impact pathways related to intervention complexity
| Context | Mechanism | Outcome | Implication for the diarrhoea outcome or its estimation in the study and the Waddington review |
|---|---|---|---|
| Agencies make operational decisions on what to include in their intervention and where to intervene. | (a) Staff modify intervention in response to local circumstances ( | (a) The intervention implemented differs substantially from the label, involving additional elements that affect its impact | Effect of the (current) intervention is overestimated. |
| (b) Interventions cluster in certain areas to draw on the information from earlier efforts or in response to policy or administrative directive ( | (b) What people experience includes the contribution of both the current and earlier interventions. |
Impact pathway related to the direct multiple benefits of interventions
| Context | Mechanism | Outcome | Implication for the diarrhoea outcome or its estimation in the study and the Waddington review |
|---|---|---|---|
| Several sources of ill-being, including non-diahorreal infections, are linked to poor access to water and to insanitary environment. | WASH interventions alleviate determinants of these different sources of ill-being. | Multiple benefits (health, time and expense saved by more accessible services), in addition to diarrhoea reduction, may be realized as a direct consequence of the intervention ( | Possibly no effect (additional benefits are valued in their own right); may increase beneficiaries’ commitment to supporting and maintaining the intervention, enhancing sustainability. |
Impact pathway related to unintended negative consequences of intervention
| Context | Mechanism | Outcome | Implication for the diarrhoea outcome or its estimation in the study and the Waddington review |
|---|---|---|---|
| Agencies make operational decisions on where to site interventions and where to work first in situations of limited transparency and accountability. | These decisions may be affected by political influence, corruption and ease of access. Wealthier and healthier groups generally have greater influence and ability to offer bribes and live in more accessible, salubrious areas. | Interventions exacerbate existing inequality in services and health status. | Intervention’s effect is overestimated when comparing treatment and untreated areas without correction for baseline differences ( |
Impact pathway linking domestic water supply to food production or purchase
| Context | Mechanism | Outcome | Implication for the diarrhoea outcome or its estimation in the study and the Waddington review |
|---|---|---|---|
| Water supply interventions enable beneficiaries not only to avoid water-related diseases but also to access a resource, increasingly in demand, that can be used for a range of purposes. | People often use water for production (esp. of food in rural/peri-urban areas); or to reduce private expenditure for water. The poor use the additional income in large proportion to purchase food. They also save time for procuring water. | Increased food, water and time are valued in their own right. Improved child nutrition may also contribute to reduced diarrhoea. | Attribution of diarrhoea reduction solely to direct effect of water supply may be mistaken; people’s commitment to support and maintain the system is increased, enhancing sustainability ( |
Impact pathway related to the diffusion of innovations
| Context | Mechanism | Outcome | Implication for the diarrhoea outcome or its estimation in the study and the Waddington review |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interventions are implemented in communities whose members are linked in social networks; they are also linked, generally less intensively, with people in neighbouring communities. | Information that people gain from interventions and their experience with new practices moves through these networks. | Information from interventions or direct access to infrastructure benefits people in control as well as treatment groups. | Estimates of diarrhoea morbidity reduction based on the difference between treatment and control groups are biased downwards ( |
Impact pathway related to local institutions
| Context | Mechanism | Outcome | Implication for the diarrhoea outcome or its estimation in the study and the Waddington review |
|---|---|---|---|
| The communities in which interventions are implemented have an adaptive capacity for self-governance. | Local institutions, formal and informal, influence the spread, adaptation and retention of interventions. | Distribution of benefits and their sustainability are generally positively affected. | The effect of institutions on distribution and sustainability of the diarrhoea morbidity reduction is largely unrecognized by the SR ( |