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Identifying Participants and
Community Capacity:
Means to Improved Health Practices
or an End-in-itself
Carol Underwood, PhD
April 25, 2013
CC - Background
• The intervention
– Health Communication Partnership in Zambia
(HCPZ)
– 5-year, USAID-supported project, 2005-2010
– Key aspect: to enable individuals &
communities to take positive health actions &
strengthen community-based systems and
networks
– Community capacity building a central feature
of HCPZ
CC - Background
• What is community capacity?
– The characteristics of communities that influence their
ability to overcome barriers and find or cultivate
opportunities to address social, economic, political
issues
– A social protective factor or “condition that can
mitigate social ills” IOM
• What does the literature tell us?
– Extensive CC literature; identifies a range of domains,
including participation, leadership, social and inter-
organizational networks, sense of community,
resource mobilization, among others
– Yet, research has rarely explored how communities
define and understand the concept
Study Approach
• Goals
– Characterize & develop CC domains and indicators
– Validate domains & indicators
– Test validated community capacity indicators
• Three phases:
• Phase I:
– Literature review to inform qualitative study
– Qualitative study: 16 FGDs with minors, adult women, adult men,
urban & rural
• Phase II: Field test & validation of identified indicators
• Phase III: Evaluation
• Co-authors:
– Marc Boulay, Gail Snetro-Plewman, Mubiana
Macwan’gi, Janani Vijayaraghavan, Mebelo
Namfukwe, David Marsh
Phase I Results
• Community members identified 11 unique
domains:
– sense of community belonging; effective
community organisation and institutions;
enhanced community participation; community
cooperation; strengthened community support;
improved use of individual skills, knowledge and
abilities; community power; social cohesion;
resource mobilisation; leadership; and ability to
raise awareness
• International team met to vet the domains,
augmented domains with key areas from the
literature, reduced 11 domains to 6 for field
testing
Phase II Results
• Quasi-probability sample of 720 individuals
• Study found:
– Social cohesion (7 indicators); alpha=0.621
– Collective efficacy (4 indicators); alpha=0.792
– Conflict management (4 indicators);
alpha=0.621
– Type of leadership (5 indicators); alpha=0.785
– Effective leadership (6 indicators);
alpha=0.853
– Participation (4 indicators); alpha=0.739
Phase III
Phase III: Hypotheses
• We hypothesized a multi-step pathway
leading from the intervention activities to
health behaviors through their effect on
Community Capacity:
– H1: the interventions will be associated with/
influence Community Capacity [Step A];
– H2: Capacity will then prompt Community
Action [Step B], and
– H3: Community Action will affect health
behaviors [Step C].
Phase III: Methods
• Probability sample of 2,462 women (15-
49) & 2,354 men (15-59) from 24
intervention & 12 comparison districts
• Principal components analysis with
varimax rotation identified a single factor
that explained 60% of the variance across
the CC indicators
• Therefore, a single scale to measure CC
was retained
Phase III Results
• Individuals living in intervention
communities, regardless of the level of
intensity of these activities, reported
significantly higher scores on the
Community Capacity scale compared to
individuals living in the control
communities. H1 supported.
Odds Ratios and Confidence Intervals from a
multivariate logistic regression model predicting
reported community action to address a health
problem in the past year
Source: 2009 HCP/Zambia Endline Survey
Difference from Referent Group: *p<0.05; **p<0.01; ***p<0.001
Phase III Results
• Individuals reporting higher levels of
community capacity were also more
likely to report that their community
worked together in the past year to
address a health problem in their
community. H2 supported.
Community capacity &
health behaviors
• Compared to individuals who did not report
that their community worked together in the
past year, individuals who lived in
communities that worked together to address
health problems were:
– twice as likely to be currently using a modern
contraceptive method
– 1.8 times more likely to have received an HIV test
and to know the results of that test, and
– 1.5 times more likely to have had their youngest
child sleep under a bed net to prevent malaria.
Community capacity &
health behaviors (cont’d)
• Controlling for community action, exposure
to the intervention was not directly related
to these behaviors and community
capacity was directly related to the use of
a bed net, but not other health practices.
• Yet . . . there were also indirect effects.
Total, direct and indirect sizes estimated
from mediation analysis
Step A – B Step B – C
FP Use Bednet Use HIV Test
Total effect
size
Coefficient 0.045* 0.077* 0.145* 0.096*
95% CI 0.007, 0.082 0.041, 0.114 0.071, 0.217 0.061, 0.133
Direct effect
size
Coefficient 0.020 0.022 0.122* 0.051*
95% CI -0.018, 0.054 -0.017, 0.060 0.046, 0.195 0.014, 0.087
Indirect effect
size
Coefficient 0.025* 0.055* 0.022* 0.046*
95% CI 0.017, 0.034 0.041, 0.068 0.006, 0.043 0.036, 0.057
Proportion of
total effect
mediated
56.2 71.5 15.3 47.6
Step A – B: Intervention  Community Capacity  Community Action
Step B – C: Community Capacity  Community Action  Health Behavior
*Effect size different from 0, based on bootstrap using 500 iterations
Limitations
• Qualitative phase: not generalizable, based on
purposively selected sample.
• Post-test only (baseline data at both control and
intervention communities would have strengthened
the evidence)
• Challenges associated with measuring macro-level
concepts, such as community capacity, with
individual-level reports.
• We suggest this approach is a useful step in the
development of a tool for evaluating the effectiveness
of community-based projects for health and social
development.
Conclusions
• Enhanced capacity was signficantly
associated with having taken community
action for health – a community-level
outcome. Thus, community members came
together in an attempt to collectively improve
health outcomes.
• Moreover, by fostering community capacity
and stimulating community action, the
intervention appears to have had signficant
indirect effects on such health behaviors as
contraceptive use, receipt of HIV tests, and
bed net use among young children.
Conclusions (continued)
• This demonstrates that building
community capacity, in this instance,
was both a means to an end – improved
health behaviors and reported collective
action for health – and an end-in-itself,
both of which are vital to social
development.
Identifying Participants and
and now over to you . . .

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Community Capacity Means to Improved Health Practices or an End-in-Itself_Carol Underwood_4.25.13

  • 1. Identifying Participants and Community Capacity: Means to Improved Health Practices or an End-in-itself Carol Underwood, PhD April 25, 2013
  • 2. CC - Background • The intervention – Health Communication Partnership in Zambia (HCPZ) – 5-year, USAID-supported project, 2005-2010 – Key aspect: to enable individuals & communities to take positive health actions & strengthen community-based systems and networks – Community capacity building a central feature of HCPZ
  • 3. CC - Background • What is community capacity? – The characteristics of communities that influence their ability to overcome barriers and find or cultivate opportunities to address social, economic, political issues – A social protective factor or “condition that can mitigate social ills” IOM • What does the literature tell us? – Extensive CC literature; identifies a range of domains, including participation, leadership, social and inter- organizational networks, sense of community, resource mobilization, among others – Yet, research has rarely explored how communities define and understand the concept
  • 4. Study Approach • Goals – Characterize & develop CC domains and indicators – Validate domains & indicators – Test validated community capacity indicators • Three phases: • Phase I: – Literature review to inform qualitative study – Qualitative study: 16 FGDs with minors, adult women, adult men, urban & rural • Phase II: Field test & validation of identified indicators • Phase III: Evaluation • Co-authors: – Marc Boulay, Gail Snetro-Plewman, Mubiana Macwan’gi, Janani Vijayaraghavan, Mebelo Namfukwe, David Marsh
  • 5. Phase I Results • Community members identified 11 unique domains: – sense of community belonging; effective community organisation and institutions; enhanced community participation; community cooperation; strengthened community support; improved use of individual skills, knowledge and abilities; community power; social cohesion; resource mobilisation; leadership; and ability to raise awareness • International team met to vet the domains, augmented domains with key areas from the literature, reduced 11 domains to 6 for field testing
  • 6. Phase II Results • Quasi-probability sample of 720 individuals • Study found: – Social cohesion (7 indicators); alpha=0.621 – Collective efficacy (4 indicators); alpha=0.792 – Conflict management (4 indicators); alpha=0.621 – Type of leadership (5 indicators); alpha=0.785 – Effective leadership (6 indicators); alpha=0.853 – Participation (4 indicators); alpha=0.739
  • 8. Phase III: Hypotheses • We hypothesized a multi-step pathway leading from the intervention activities to health behaviors through their effect on Community Capacity: – H1: the interventions will be associated with/ influence Community Capacity [Step A]; – H2: Capacity will then prompt Community Action [Step B], and – H3: Community Action will affect health behaviors [Step C].
  • 9. Phase III: Methods • Probability sample of 2,462 women (15- 49) & 2,354 men (15-59) from 24 intervention & 12 comparison districts • Principal components analysis with varimax rotation identified a single factor that explained 60% of the variance across the CC indicators • Therefore, a single scale to measure CC was retained
  • 10. Phase III Results • Individuals living in intervention communities, regardless of the level of intensity of these activities, reported significantly higher scores on the Community Capacity scale compared to individuals living in the control communities. H1 supported.
  • 11. Odds Ratios and Confidence Intervals from a multivariate logistic regression model predicting reported community action to address a health problem in the past year Source: 2009 HCP/Zambia Endline Survey Difference from Referent Group: *p<0.05; **p<0.01; ***p<0.001
  • 12. Phase III Results • Individuals reporting higher levels of community capacity were also more likely to report that their community worked together in the past year to address a health problem in their community. H2 supported.
  • 13. Community capacity & health behaviors • Compared to individuals who did not report that their community worked together in the past year, individuals who lived in communities that worked together to address health problems were: – twice as likely to be currently using a modern contraceptive method – 1.8 times more likely to have received an HIV test and to know the results of that test, and – 1.5 times more likely to have had their youngest child sleep under a bed net to prevent malaria.
  • 14. Community capacity & health behaviors (cont’d) • Controlling for community action, exposure to the intervention was not directly related to these behaviors and community capacity was directly related to the use of a bed net, but not other health practices. • Yet . . . there were also indirect effects.
  • 15. Total, direct and indirect sizes estimated from mediation analysis Step A – B Step B – C FP Use Bednet Use HIV Test Total effect size Coefficient 0.045* 0.077* 0.145* 0.096* 95% CI 0.007, 0.082 0.041, 0.114 0.071, 0.217 0.061, 0.133 Direct effect size Coefficient 0.020 0.022 0.122* 0.051* 95% CI -0.018, 0.054 -0.017, 0.060 0.046, 0.195 0.014, 0.087 Indirect effect size Coefficient 0.025* 0.055* 0.022* 0.046* 95% CI 0.017, 0.034 0.041, 0.068 0.006, 0.043 0.036, 0.057 Proportion of total effect mediated 56.2 71.5 15.3 47.6 Step A – B: Intervention  Community Capacity  Community Action Step B – C: Community Capacity  Community Action  Health Behavior *Effect size different from 0, based on bootstrap using 500 iterations
  • 16. Limitations • Qualitative phase: not generalizable, based on purposively selected sample. • Post-test only (baseline data at both control and intervention communities would have strengthened the evidence) • Challenges associated with measuring macro-level concepts, such as community capacity, with individual-level reports. • We suggest this approach is a useful step in the development of a tool for evaluating the effectiveness of community-based projects for health and social development.
  • 17. Conclusions • Enhanced capacity was signficantly associated with having taken community action for health – a community-level outcome. Thus, community members came together in an attempt to collectively improve health outcomes. • Moreover, by fostering community capacity and stimulating community action, the intervention appears to have had signficant indirect effects on such health behaviors as contraceptive use, receipt of HIV tests, and bed net use among young children.
  • 18. Conclusions (continued) • This demonstrates that building community capacity, in this instance, was both a means to an end – improved health behaviors and reported collective action for health – and an end-in-itself, both of which are vital to social development.
  • 19. Identifying Participants and and now over to you . . .