| Literature DB >> 25123070 |
Stanistreet Debbi1, Puzzolo Elisa2, Bruce Nigel3, Pope Dan4, Rehfuess Eva5.
Abstract
Household burning of solid fuels in traditional stoves is detrimental to health, the environment and development. A range of improved solid fuel stoves (IS) are available but little is known about successful approaches to dissemination. This qualitative systematic review aimed to identify factors that influence household uptake of IS in low- and middle-income countries. Extensive searches were carried out and studies were screened and extracted using established systematic review methods. Fourteen qualitative studies from Asia, Africa and Latin-America met the inclusion criteria. Thematic synthesis was used to synthesise data and findings are presented under seven framework domains. Findings relate to user and stakeholder perceptions and highlight the importance of cost, good stove design, fuel and time savings, health benefits, being able to cook traditional dishes and cleanliness in relation to uptake. Creating demand, appropriate approaches to business, and community involvement, are also discussed. Achieving and sustaining uptake is complex and requires consideration of a broad range of factors, which operate at household, community, regional and national levels. Initiatives aimed at IS scale up should include quantitative evaluations of effectiveness, supplemented with qualitative studies to assess factors affecting uptake, with an equity focus.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25123070 PMCID: PMC4143859 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph110808228
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Search terms used for the main search strategy on IS.
| Intervention AND | Uptake |
|---|---|
| * stove/* stoves
| Adopt*
|
Figure 1Flowchart of search results.
Characteristics of included studies.
| Author/Year &Reference | Country, Area | Setting | Improved Solid Fuel Stove Type | Intervention Programme | Study Design * | Sampling and Participants Characteristics | Data Collection Period and Language Used | Data Analysis | Quality Appraisal # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anderson 2007 [ | India, Western Maharashtra | Rural | Bhagyalaxmi stoves | ARTI’s program, with support from Shell Foundation | Ethnographic case study making use of FGDs, SSIs, KIIs and PO | 3 FGDs (7–8 women each; users/non-users), 3 SSIs (user/non-users), KIIs (project coordinator and translator) | Two years after stove installation; | Editing analysis ( | Strong |
| Chowdhury | Bangladesh, Habigony region | Rural | Mud stoves | Nishorgo Support project (2009) | Face-to-face survey and one FGD | No. = 70 (users/non-users women) and 1 FGD with community members | January–February 2009; interviews in Bangla | Not stated; descriptive narrative | Weak |
| Christoff 2010 | Mexico, State of Mexico | Rural | Patsari and Onil stoves | SEDESOL National program | FGDs | 4 FGDs (9–14 each; women users only) | July–November 2009; Interviews in Spanish | Thematic analysis | Strong |
| Gordon | Mongolia, State capital | Urban | Coal stoves | World Bank program | FGDs | 3 FGDs (8 mixed-gender each, users/non-users); | Not specified (1375 stoves given at the time of the study); interviews in Mongolian | Editing analysis ( | Strong |
| Jagoe | India, Bundelkhand region | Rural | Anandi and Sukhad stoves | ARTI’s program, with support from Shell Foundation | FGDs at baseline and follow-up | Separate FGDs with men and women, 11 FGDs at baseline and 8 FGDs at 12 moths follow up. 3 KIIs at baseline, 3 and 12 months | October 2004– | Framework analysis | Moderate |
| Jagoe | India, Western Maharashtra | Rural | Bhagyalaxmi and Laxmi stoves | ARTI’s program, with support from Shell Foundation | FGDs at baseline and follow-up | FGDs with women users/non users. | May 2005–May 2006; language not specified | Framework analysis | Moderate |
| Pandey 1989 | Central Nepal, Dhading District | Rural | Bikase stoves | Nepal Community Forestry Development Project (since 1984) | SSIs and PO | SSIs with 25 women (10 users; 15 non-users) from Brahmin and Cheetri castes | April–September 1987; Interviews in Nepali | Not stated; descriptive narrative | Moderate |
| Person | Western Kenya | Rural | Upesi Jiko charcoal stoves | Safe water and AIDS program, (SWAP) (since 2008) | SSIs | SSIs with 40 women (30 purchasers, 10 stove promoters) | July 2008–March 2009; interviews in Dholou | Modified grounded theory approach | Strong |
| Sesan (2012) | Kenya, | Rural/ | Mainly upesi Jiko charcoal stoves with/without eaves space | USEPA project | SSIs and PO | No. = 24 (15 women users and 9 elite interviews) | November–December 2009; language not reported | Not stated; descriptive narrative | Moderate |
| Simon (2007) | India, Western Maharashtra | Rural | Bhagylaxmi, Laxmi cement stoves and other models | ARTI’s CBFCDprogram, with support from Shell Foundation | SSIs, KIIs and PO | No. = 55 (40 women users, 13 male + 2 female stove builders), KIIs (4 NGO employees and 7 field officers) | September–December 2005; interviews in English or Marathi | Not stated; descriptive narrative | Strong |
| Sovacool and Drupady (2011) | Bangladesh | Rural/ | Clay stoves | Intervention promoted by the company Grameen Shakti (since 2006) | Case study with use of SSIs | No. = 48 (among users, rural community leaders, manufacturers and 19 institutions) | June 2009–October 2010; Interviews in Bengali with local variation and dialects | Narrative analysis | Moderate |
| Troncoso | Mexico, Michoacán State | Rural | Patsari stoves | Regional program implemented by GIRA | SSIs and PO | No. = 67 women (52 users, 15 non-users) | One year after stove installation; language not reported | Not stated; descriptive narrative and tables | Moderate |
| Troncoso | Mexico, Michoacán State | Rural | Patsari stoves | Regional program implemented by GIRA | KIIs | No. = 24 (several categories of stakeholders including stove builders and project technicians) | At the end of program implementation; language not reported | Not stated; descriptive narrative | Moderate |
| Velasco (2008) | Mexico, Michoacán State | Rural | Patsari stoves | Regional program implemented by GIRA (2003–2006) | Case study base on SSIs and PO | No. = 24 women users of one or multiple cooking technologies | 6 weeks in 2008; language not reported | Not stated; descriptive narrative | Moderate |
FGDs: Focus Group Discussions; KIIs: Key Informant Interviews; PO: Participant observation; SSIs: Semi-Structured Interviews; *: Only qualitative elements of mixed-methods studies are reported in this table; **: Study conducted in a setting defined as “peri-urban”; : Quality appraisal adapted by Harden et al., 2009 and based on selected criteria; Strong: all or the majority criteria fulfilled; Moderate: most criteria fulfilled; Weak: few criteria fulfilled.