Effective community engagement in one health research in Sub-Saharan Africa: a systematic review.

IF 3.8 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES One health outlook Pub Date : 2025-01-15 DOI:10.1186/s42522-024-00126-4
Sidney Sangong, Farrukh Ishaque Saah, Luchuo Engelbert Bain
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Abstract

Background: The one health (OH) approach, linking human, animal, and environmental health, relies on effective community engagement (CE), education, stewardship, and effective regional and global partnerships. For real impact, communities should be at the centre of research agenda setting and program implementation. This review aimed at synthesizing empirical evidence on how communities are involved in one health research. Specifically, the review aimed at documenting the extent of community involvement in one health research, as well as to identify the barriers and facilitators to effective community engagement in one health research in sub Saharan Africa.

Methods: The study was a systematic review conducted using the 2020 Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) guidelines. Empirical peer-reviewed research articles on community engagement in one health research published from January 2000 to September 2023 in English or French were retrieved from seven databases: MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, WHO Afro Library, the National Institute for Health Research, and African Journals Online databases. The extracted data from the included studies were analysed using a thematic synthesis approach.

Results: The final review and synthesis included eight studies. The extent of CE in the one health research approach is quite limited. Two main best practices of CE in OH research were: 1) Awareness raising on OH research through social mobilization, rural outreach sensitization, and wide community assembly and 2) Building local capacity through community-based OH Training and Leadership workshops. The barriers to effective CE included: inadequate community research literacy levels, contextual disparities in CE, inadequate dissemination of research findings, language barriers and ineffective and uncoordinated stakeholder involvement.

Conclusion: The review underscores the importance of effective CE in one health research. The best practices for CE in one health research are raising awareness and co-creation which should guide future initiatives. There are cultural, geographical, linguistic, and educational constraints that pose barriers to CE, requiring a more integrated and community-centric approach to one health research in SSA. An effective CE in one health research through this approach will ultimately lead to more effective responses and control of zoonotic disease outbreaks.

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撒哈拉以南非洲一项卫生研究的有效社区参与:系统审查。
背景:将人类、动物和环境卫生联系起来的“同一个健康”方针依赖于有效的社区参与、教育、管理以及有效的区域和全球伙伴关系。为了产生真正的影响,社区应该处于研究议程制定和项目实施的中心。本综述旨在综合关于社区如何参与一项健康研究的经验证据。具体而言,审查旨在记录社区参与一项卫生研究的程度,并确定社区有效参与撒哈拉以南非洲一项卫生研究的障碍和促进因素。方法:本研究采用2020年系统评价和荟萃分析首选报告项目(PRISMA)指南进行系统评价。从MEDLINE、EMBASE、CINAHL、Cochrane图书馆、世卫组织非洲图书馆、国家卫生研究所和非洲期刊在线数据库检索了2000年1月至2023年9月以英文或法文发表的一项卫生研究中关于社区参与的经验性同行评议研究文章。从纳入的研究中提取的数据使用主题综合方法进行分析。结果:最终的综述和综合包括8项研究。在单一健康研究方法中,CE的范围相当有限。健康教育在健康教育研究中的两个主要最佳实践是:1)通过社会动员、农村宣传和广泛的社区集会提高对健康教育研究的认识;2)通过以社区为基础的健康教育培训和领导讲习班建设地方能力。有效的环境评估障碍包括:社区研究素养水平不足、环境评估的背景差异、研究成果传播不足、语言障碍以及无效和不协调的利益相关者参与。结论:本综述强调了有效CE在一项健康研究中的重要性。在一项卫生研究中实施环境保护的最佳做法是提高认识和共同创造,这应指导今后的行动。文化、地理、语言和教育等方面的限制因素阻碍了社会科学研究的开展,因此需要对社会科学研究采取更加综合和以社区为中心的方法。通过这种方法在一项卫生研究中进行有效的CE将最终导致更有效的应对和控制人畜共患疾病暴发。
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