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A systematic approach to context-mapping to prepare for health interventions: development and validation of the SETTING-tool in four countries

Authors :
Sally Singh
Bruce Kirenga
Mattijs E Numans
Hilary Pinnock
Maarten J Postma
Niels H Chavannes
Susanne Reventlow
Andy Barton
Grace Ndeezi
Janwillem Kocks
Sian Williams
Winceslaus Katagira
Rebecca Nantanda
Ioanna Tsiligianni
Sophia Papadakis
Christos Lionis
Patrick Musinguzi
Rupert Jones
Evelyn A Brakema
Rianne MJJ van der Kleij
Charlotte C Poot
Simon Walusimbi
Pham Le An
Talant Sooronbaev
Matty R Crone
Ria R Reis
Marilena Anastasaki
Azamat Akylbekov
Antonios Bertsias
Pham Duong Uyen Binh
Job FM van Boven
Dennis Burges
Lucy Cartwright
Vasiliki E Chatzea
Liza Cragg
Tran Ngoc Dang
Ilyas Dautov
Berik Emilov
Irene Ferarrio
Frederik A van Gemert
Ben Hedrick
Le Huynh Thi Cam Hong
Nick Hopkinson
Elvira Isaeva
Corina de Jong
Sanne van Kampen
Jesper Kjærgaard
Le Thi Tuyet Lan
Tran Thanh Duv Linh
Kim Xuan Loan
Maamed Mademilov
Andy McEwen
Jillian Pooler
Anja Poulsen
Pippa Powell
Nguyen Nhat Quynh
Dimitra Sifaki-Pistolla
Jaime Correia de Sousa
James Stout
Marianne Stubbe Østergaard
Aizhamal Tabyshova
Tran Diep Tuan
Le Thanh Van
Nguyen Nhu Vinh
Louise Warren
Source :
BMJ Global Health, Vol 6, Iss 1 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2021.

Abstract

Effectiveness of health interventions can be substantially impaired by implementation failure. Context-driven implementation strategies are critical for successful implementation. However, there is no practical, evidence-based guidance on how to map the context in order to design context-driven strategies. Therefore, this practice paper describes the development and validation of a systematic context-mapping tool. The tool was cocreated with local end-users through a multistage approach. As proof of concept, the tool was used to map beliefs and behaviour related to chronic respiratory disease within the FRESH AIR project in Uganda, Kyrgyzstan, Vietnam and Greece. Feasibility and acceptability were evaluated using the modified Conceptual Framework for Implementation Fidelity. Effectiveness was assessed by the degree to which context-driven adjustments were made to implementation strategies of FRESH AIR health interventions. The resulting Setting-Exploration-Treasure-Trail-to-Inform-implementatioN-strateGies (SETTING-tool) consisted of six steps: (1) Coset study priorities with local stakeholders, (2) Combine a qualitative rapid assessment with a quantitative survey (a mixed-method design), (3) Use context-sensitive materials, (4) Collect data involving community researchers, (5) Analyse pragmatically and/or in-depth to ensure timely communication of findings and (6) Continuously disseminate findings to relevant stakeholders. Use of the tool proved highly feasible, acceptable and effective in each setting. To conclude, the SETTING-tool is validated to systematically map local contexts for (lung) health interventions in diverse low-resource settings. It can support policy-makers, non-governmental organisations and health workers in the design of context-driven implementation strategies. This can reduce the risk of implementation failure and the waste of resource potential. Ultimately, this could improve health outcomes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20597908
Volume :
6
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMJ Global Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.20f01e21aa064f03853df07c78d784d4
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2020-003221