Abstract

BackgroundRecent literature on community intervention research stresses system change as a condition for durable impact. This involves highly participatory social processes leading to behavioural change.MethodsBefore launching the intervention in the Nicaraguan arm of Camino Verde, a cluster-randomised controlled trial to show that pesticide-free community mobilisation adds effectiveness to conventional dengue controls, we held structured discussions with leaders of intervention communities on costs of dengue illness and dengue control measures taken by both government and households. These discussions were the first step in an effort at Socialising Evidence for Participatory Action (SEPA), a community mobilisation method used successfully in other contexts. Theoretical grounding came from community psychology and behavioural economics.ResultsThe leaders expressed surprise at how large and unexpected an economic burden dengue places on households. They also acknowledged that large investments of household and government resources to combat dengue have not had the expected results. Many were not ready to see community preventive measures as a substitute for chemical controls but all the leaders approved the formation of “brigades” to promote chemical-free household control efforts in their own communities.ConclusionsDiscussions centred on household budget decisions provide a good entry point for researchers to engage with communities, especially when the evidence showed that current expenditures were providing a poor return. People became motivated not only to search for ways to reduce their costs but also to question the current response to the problem in question. This in turn helped create conditions favourable to community mobilisation for change.Trial registrationISRCTN27581154.

Highlights

  • Recent literature on community intervention research stresses system change as a condition for durable impact

  • Dengue and the Camino Verde project In Nicaragua, as in most countries, top-down and pesticidedependent approaches have failed to curb the spread of dengue

  • Socialising Evidence for Participatory Action (SEPA) is neither a recipe nor a model to be adjusted according to particular circumstances

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Summary

Introduction

Recent literature on community intervention research stresses system change as a condition for durable impact. This involves highly participatory social processes leading to behavioural change. Efforts are being made to make the struggle to control dengue more participatory [1], until recently the Nicaraguan government strategy for control of the Aedes Aegypti mosquito rested on periodic insertion of a packet of an organophosphate, temephos (sold and known popularly under the brand name “Abate”), in water containers of all households, as well as spraying insecticides in urban areas. The belief persists that mosquito-borne diseases can only be prevented by the application of chemical agents, whether through the action of public health authorities or by purchase and personal or household use of such agents. Several trials show an impact of community approaches on vector density but no previous ones have shown impact on dengue illness or serological evidence of infection [7]

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