| Literature DB >> 32854722 |
Geoffrey Chan1, J Douglas Storey2, Manoja Kumar Das3, Emma Sacks4, Mira Johri5, Tamar Kabakian-Khasholian6, Deepak Paudel7, Sachiyo Yoshida8, Anayda Portela9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Social, behavioural and community engagement (SBCE) interventions are essential for global maternal, newborn and child health (MNCH) strategies. Past efforts to synthesise research on SBCE interventions identified a need for clear priorities to guide future research. WHO led an exercise to identify global research priorities for SBCE interventions to improve MNCH.Entities:
Keywords: CHNRI; Research priority; child health; community engagement; health promotion; maternal health; newborn health; social and behavioural change
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32854722 PMCID: PMC7450986 DOI: 10.1186/s12961-020-00597-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Res Policy Syst ISSN: 1478-4505
Fig. 1Conceptual framework for SBCE interventions for women, children’s and adolescents’ health [2]
Fig. 2The six steps in the research priority setting exercise for SBCE interventions for MNCH
Framework for proposing SBCE intervention research priorities
| CHNRI research domains [ | EWEC Global Strategy objectives [ | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Interventions that save lives | Interventions that improve health status | Interventions that sustain health and social outcomes | |
| Find a new approach to save lives | Find a new approach to improve health status | Find a new approach to sustain health and social outcomes | |
| Make a life-saving intervention simpler or cheaper | Make a health improvement intervention simpler or cheaper | Make a sustainability intervention simpler or cheaper | |
| Scale-up or improve the impact of a life-saving intervention | Scale-up or improve the impact of a health improvement intervention | Scale-up or improve the impact of a sustainability intervention | |
| Understand factors that improve survival | Understand factors that improve health status | Understand factors that sustain social and health outcomes | |
CHNRI Child Health and Nutrition Research Initiative, EWEC Every Woman Every Child, SBCE social, behavioural and community engagement
Levels of detail for defining research priorities
| Level of detail | Examples |
|---|---|
| Health area | Maternal health |
| Research avenue | Research to identify social, behavioural and community engagement interventions that contribute to improved maternal health and rights |
| Research option | Research on interventions to make health services more accountable and responsive to community needs for improved maternal health |
| Research question | Does community monitoring of health services influence health facility performance for maternal health? |
| Is there a set of indicators on health facility performance that will lead facilities to improve their services if the data is routinely made available to the public? |
Characteristics of experts who participated in proposing and scoring priorities
| Health area | Characteristics | Experts who proposed research priorities | Experts who scored research priorities | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | % | No. | % | |||
| Total | 120 | 78 | ||||
| Sex | Female | 76 | 63.3 | 48 | 61.5 | |
| Male | 39 | 32.5 | 30 | 38.5 | ||
| Not recorded | 5 | 4.2 | 0 | 0.0 | ||
| Type of expert | Programme | 83 | 69.2 | 53 | 67.9 | |
| Researcher | 37 | 30.8 | 25 | 32.1 | ||
| Income level of country of residencea | HIC | 50 | 41.7 | 35 | 44.9 | |
| LMIC | 70 | 58.3 | 43 | 55.1 | ||
| Total | 109 | 116 | ||||
| Sex | Female | 54 | 49.5 | 63 | 54.3 | |
| Male | 54 | 49.5 | 53 | 45.7 | ||
| Not recorded | 1 | 0.9 | 0 | 0.0 | ||
| Type of expert | Programme | 80 | 73.4 | 70 | 60.3 | |
| Researcher | 29 | 26.6 | 45 | 38.8 | ||
| Not recorded | 0 | 0.0% | 1 | 0.9 | ||
| Income level of country of residencea | HIC | 55 | 50.5 | 51 | 44.0 | |
| LMIC | 52 | 47.7 | 63 | 54.3 | ||
| Not recorded | 2 | 1.8 | 2 | 1.7 | ||
| Total | 81 | 87 | ||||
| Sex | Female | 43 | 53.1 | 52 | 59.8 | |
| Male | 36 | 44.4 | 32 | 36.8 | ||
| Other | 0 | 0.0 | 1 | 1.1 | ||
| Not recorded | 2 | 2.5 | 2 | 2.3 | ||
| Type of expert | Programme | 51 | 63.0 | 56 | 64.4 | |
| Researcher | 29 | 35.8 | 29 | 33.3 | ||
| Not recorded | 1 | 1.2 | 2 | 2.3 | ||
| Income level of country of residencea | HIC | 36 | 44.4 | 40 | 46.0 | |
| LMIC | 42 | 51.9 | 45 | 51.7 | ||
| Not recorded | 3 | 3.7 | 2 | 2.3 | ||
| Total | 240 | |||||
| Sex | Female | 139 | 57.9 | |||
| Male | 100 | 41.7 | ||||
| Other | 1 | 0.4 | ||||
| Type of expert | Programme | 154 | 64.2 | |||
| Researcher | 86 | 35.8 | ||||
| Income level of country of residencea | HIC | 106 | 44.2 | |||
| LMIC | 133 | 55.4 | ||||
| Not recorded | 1 | 0.4 | ||||
aBased on the 2018 World Bank Classification. HIC high-income country, LMIC low- and middle-income country
Number of research priorities proposed and scored, by health area
| Maternal | Newborn | Child | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of priorities proposed by experts in step 2 | 333 | 303 | 231 | 867 |
| Number of priorities sent to experts to score in step 4a | 146 | 163 | 135 | 444 |
aIncludes 57 cross-cutting priorities
Number of times research priorities were scored
| Number of times individual research priorities were scored | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Health area | Number of scorers | Maximum | Minimum | Mode |
| Maternal | 78 | 17 | 7 | 12 |
| Newborn | 116 | 25 | 10 | 16 |
| Child | 87 | 21 | 12 | 14 |
| Cross-cutting | 240 | 55 | 15 | 43 |
Top 10 maternal health SBCE research priorities
| Rank | Maternal health research priority |
|---|---|
| 1 | Understand the determinants of self-care, family care practices, utilisation of maternity care services and access to life-saving commodities, and improve the delivery of approaches to address these determinants |
| 2 | Find new approaches and improve the delivery of existing approaches to increase community awareness, capacity, mobilisation, engagement and social accountability |
| 3 | Improve the delivery of approaches to strengthen health service responsiveness to cultural needs and preferences and to strengthen intercultural linkages between the health services and the community |
| 4 | Find new approaches and improve the delivery of existing approaches to foster effective male involvement in efforts to increase maternal, newborn and child well-being and access to care |
| 5 | Improve the delivery of health education and counselling interventions that are tailored to the needs of different audiences to improve self-care, family care practices and utilisation of maternity care services |
| 6 | Improve the delivery of community-based midwifery programmes to foster individual, family and community behaviours that improve maternal and newborn health |
| 7 | Find new approaches and improve the delivery of existing approaches to increase access to and use of modern family planning methods, including emergency and post-abortion contraception for women and adolescent girls |
| 8 | Understand the determinants of gender inequity and find new approaches to foster women’s empowerment and agency to improve their health |
| 9 | Find new approaches to address hunger and malnutrition |
| 10 | Improve the delivery of approaches to increase the uptake of HIV prevention and care services during pregnancy, birth and the postnatal period |
SBCE social, behavioural and community engagement
Top 10 newborn health SBCE research priorities
| Rank | Newborn health research priority |
|---|---|
| 1 | Understand the determinants of the low adoption of family care practices and care-seeking behaviour for routine newborn care and for complications and improve the delivery of approaches to address these determinants |
| 2 | Find new approaches and improve the delivery of existing approaches to health education, to increase women’s knowledge and foster appropriate care seeking for complications during pregnancy, to improve maternal and newborn health outcomes |
| 3 | Find new approaches and improve the delivery of existing approaches to address gender inequity and to foster women’s empowerment and agency to improve their health and the health of their newborns |
| 4 | Find new approaches and improve the delivery of existing approaches (both in the community and at health-care facilities) to promote the provision of appropriate nutrition for newborns and children (including sick and vulnerable newborns) by caregivers and families to address hunger and malnutrition |
| 5 | Understand the determinants of early, exclusive and continued breastfeeding and find new approaches and improve the delivery of existing approaches to address these determinants, particularly at the community level |
| 6 | Understand the determinants of health-worker behaviours and performance (including both facility- and community-based health workers) that affect acceptability and utilisation of health services for newborns |
| 7 | Improve the delivery of approaches that engage community members in reducing the social and cultural factors that cause delays in accessing appropriate maternal and newborn care (including skilled care at birth) |
| 8 | Improve the delivery of community-based newborn care approaches that impact on family care practices for the newborn, particularly in areas with low rates of facility-based births and skilled care at birth |
| 9 | Find new approaches and improve the delivery of existing approaches to improve family care practices of preterm and low birth-weight babies |
| 10 | Find new approaches to foster effective male involvement in efforts to increase maternal, newborn and child well-being and access to care |
SBCE social, behavioural and community engagement
Top 10 child health SBCE research priorities
| Rank | Child health research priority |
|---|---|
| 1 | Improve the delivery of SBCE approaches by community health workers for increased impact and scalability |
| 2 | Understand the determinants of the adoption of beneficial family care practices and care-seeking behaviour for infectious diseases among vulnerable populations |
| 3 | Understand the determinants of the health service delivery factors (e.g. health worker behaviours, service quality, and financial and opportunity costs) that influence community demand for and satisfaction with child health services and find new approaches and improve the delivery of existing approaches to increase utilisation of these health services |
| 4 | Improve the delivery of approaches to support family, community and health system actions to foster healthy early childhood development for all children, including children with disabilities |
| 5 | Find new approaches and improve the delivery of existing approaches to address gender inequity and to foster women’s empowerment and agency to improve their health and the health of their children |
| 6 | Improve the delivery of health education and counselling interventions to increase the uptake and maintenance of beneficial family care practices for maternal, newborn and child health |
| 7 | Understand the determinants of maintaining exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months and of maintaining breastfeeding for 2 years |
| 8 | Understand the determinants of optimal early childhood nutrition and growth, with attention to the role of gender and household dynamics, and find new approaches to address these determinants |
| 9 | Find new approaches for community participation and social accountability that improve access to and quality of care for newborns and children |
| 10 | Understand the determinants of maternal depression and assess its impact on women’s and children’s health and development |
SBCE social, behavioural and community engagement
Top 10 cross-cutting MNCH SBCE research priorities
| Rank | Cross-cutting MNCH research priority |
|---|---|
| 1 | Improve the delivery of SBCE approaches to achieve universal health coverage of MNCH services for the most vulnerable populations |
| 2 | Understand the determinants of optimal uptake of maternal, newborn and child self-care and family care practices, and optimal care-seeking behaviour |
| 3 | Understand the determinants of health-worker behaviours and performance (including facility- and community-based health workers) that affect acceptability and utilisation of MNCH services and improve the delivery of approaches to address these determinants |
| 4 | Improve the delivery of approaches that address social norms (particularly gender norms) that cause delays in accessing appropriate MNCH care |
| 5 | Understand the determinants of optimal uptake of life-saving and other critical commodities for MNCH |
| 6 | Find new approaches and improve the delivery of existing approaches to scale up community mobilisation and engagement and to integrate them into healthcare services and other government systems for MNCH |
| 7 | Find new approaches and improve the delivery of existing approaches to enable effective learning, including peer-to-peer learning, engagement and empowerment of women, families and communities to foster behaviour change, health literacy and agency to improve MNCH |
| 8 | Improve the delivery of approaches to strengthen the integration of SBCE interventions into other services delivered by community health workers and community-based organisations to foster increased use of health services and improved MNCH |
| 9 | Find new approaches to measure emerging SBCE priorities (i.e. social inclusion, vulnerability, multi-sectorality and integration, and community capacity) to inform planning, programming and priority setting for MNCH |
| 10 | Understand the determinants and find new SBCE approaches to address women’s, newborns’ and children’s vulnerability to violence and injury |
MNCH maternal, newborn and child health, SBCE social, behavioural and community engagement
| ● Researchers | |
| ● Programme experts: | |
| ○ Ministries of health and selected other ministries of 81 high-burden countries | |
| ○ Non-government organisations (international and national) | |
| ○ For-profit private sector | |
| ○ Technical assistance agencies | |
| ○ Donors, funding agencies and foundations | |
| ○ Professional organisations (international and national) | |
| ○ Healthcare providers | |
| ○ United Nations agencies (headquarters, regional and national) |
| Participants were asked to indicate priority by assigning the following scores for each criterion: | |
| ● 0 if the research priority does not meet the criterion | |
| ● 1 if the research priority does not clearly meet or not meet the criterion | |
| ● 2 if the research priority meets the criterion |