调查英格兰大地方社区赋权倡议的健康和社会结果:混合方法评估。

Jennie Popay, Emma Halliday, Rebecca Mead, Anne Townsend, Nasima Akhter, Clare Bambra, Ben Barr, Rachel Anderson de Cuevas, Konstantinos Daras, Matt Egan, Katja Gravenhorst, Katharina Janke, Adetayo Safiriyu Kasim, Victoria McGowan, Ruth Ponsford, Joanna Reynolds, Margaret Whitehead
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:大多数关于社区赋权的研究提供了让社区参与健康促进目的的证据,而不是试图创造赋权条件。这项研究解决了这一差距。干预:Big Local于2010年从国家彩票中获得2.71亿英镑。截至2026年,它为英格兰150个相对弱势的社区提供了超过100万英镑的控制权,用于改善他们的社区。目的:调查基于地方的赋权倡议中采用的社区参与方法在人口层面和参与居民中的健康和社会结果。研究设计、数据来源和结果变量:本研究报告了第三波纵向混合方法评估。工作包1使用差异中的差异设计,使用二次数据调查与匹配的比较地区相比,大地方对所有150个大地方地区人口结果的影响。主要结果是焦虑;次要结果包括人口心理健康指标和社区犯罪。工作包2利用对大地方伙伴关系成员进行的两年一次的调查中的横断面数据和嵌套队列数据,评估了大地方的积极参与度。主要结果是心理健康,次要结果是自我评定的健康。工作包3在14个大型地方社区和全国范围内进行了定性研究,以了解影响的途径。工作包4使用生活满意度方法进行了成本效益分析,以评估大地方的利益,其中使用了工作包1对大地方对生活满意度影响的估计。结果:在人群水平上,对“报告高度焦虑”的影响(-0.8个百分点,95%置信区间 -2.4至0.7),次要结果无统计学意义,但入室盗窃除外(z评分变化-0.054,95%置信区间 -0.100至-0.009)。2017年后,焦虑情绪有所缓解。进展最快的地区的人口心理健康指标在统计学上显著降低(z评分变化-0.053,置信区间95% -0.103至-0.002)。在参与的居民中发现了喜忧参半的结果,包括2018年嵌套队列中的大地方居民的心理健康状况显著提高,但到2020年没有;这很可能是新冠肺炎。受过高等教育的居民和男性更有可能报告心理健康状况有显著改善。对心理健康的积极影响的定性描述通常与社会联系和物质/物质环境的改善有关。定性数据显示,居民的集体控制能力正在增强。据报道,一些负面影响,当地因素有时会削弱居民行使集体控制的能力。最后,根据最保守的估计,成本效益计算得出的净效益估计为6400万英镑。主要限制:新冠肺炎影响了实地调查和调查数据的解释。进行了为期4年的短期随访(2016/20年),工作包2中没有比较,并且缺乏查看各领域差异的能力。结论:我们的研究结果表明,需要投资支持社区组织从社区中脱颖而出并与社区合作。居民应领导问题的优先顺序和解决方案的设计,但不一定要领导行动;相反,各机构应该与社区平等合作,实现变革。资助:该项目由国家卫生与保健研究所(NIHR)公共卫生研究计划资助(16/09/13),并将在《公共卫生研究》上全文发表;第11卷第9期。有关更多项目信息,请访问NIHR期刊图书馆网站。
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Investigating health and social outcomes of the Big Local community empowerment initiative in England: a mixed method evaluation.

Background: Most research on community empowerment provides evidence on engaging communities for health promotion purposes rather than attempts to create empowering conditions. This study addresses this gap.

Intervention: Big Local started in 2010 with £271M from the National Lottery. Ending in 2026, it gives 150 relatively disadvantaged communities in England control over £1M to improve their neighbourhoods.

Objective: To investigate health and social outcomes, at the population level and among engaged residents, of the community engagement approach adopted in a place-based empowerment initiative.

Study design, data sources and outcome variables: This study reports on the third wave of a longitudinal mixed-methods evaluation. Work package 1 used a difference-in-differences design to investigate the impact of Big Local on population outcomes in all 150 Big Local areas compared to matched comparator areas using secondary data. The primary outcome was anxiety; secondary outcomes included a population mental health measure and crime in the neighbourhood. Work package 2 assessed active engagement in Big Local using cross-sectional data and nested cohort data from a biannual survey of Big Local partnership members. The primary outcome was mental well-being and the secondary outcome was self-rated health. Work package 3 conducted qualitative research in 14 Big Local neighbourhoods and nationally to understand pathways to impact. Work package 4 undertook a cost-benefit analysis using the life satisfaction approach to value the benefits of Big Local, which used the work package 1 estimate of Big Local impact on life satisfaction.

Results: At a population level, the impacts on 'reporting high anxiety' (-0.8 percentage points, 95% confidence interval -2.4 to 0.7) and secondary outcomes were not statistically significant, except burglary (-0.054 change in z-score, 95% confidence interval -0.100 to -0.009). There was some effect on reduced anxiety after 2017. Areas progressing fastest had a statistically significant reduction in population mental health measure (-0.053 change in z-score, 95% confidence interval -0.103 to -0.002). Mixed results were found among engaged residents, including a significant increase in mental well-being in Big Local residents in the nested cohort in 2018, but not by 2020; this is likely to be COVID-19. More highly educated residents, and males, were more likely to report a significant improvement in mental well-being. Qualitative accounts of positive impacts on mental well-being are often related to improved social connectivity and physical/material environments. Qualitative data revealed increasing capabilities for residents' collective control. Some negative impacts were reported, with local factors sometimes undermining residents' ability to exercise collective control. Finally, on the most conservative estimate, the cost-benefit calculations generate a net benefit estimate of £64M.

Main limitations: COVID-19 impacted fieldwork and interpretation of survey data. There was a short 4-year follow-up (2016/20), no comparators in work package 2 and a lack of power to look at variations across areas.

Conclusions: Our findings suggest the need for investment to support community organisations to emerge from and work with communities. Residents should lead the prioritisation of issues and design of solutions but not necessarily lead action; rather, agencies should work as equal partners with communities to deliver change.

Funding: This project was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Public Health Research Programme (16/09/13) and will be published in full in Public Health Research; Vol. 11, No. 9. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.

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