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Working in partnership with communities to improve health and research outcomes. Comparisons and commonalities between the UK and South Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 September 2019

Patricia Wilson*
Affiliation:
Professor, Centre for Health Services Studies, University of Kent, Canterbury, UK
Azwihangwisi Helen Mavhandu-Mudzusi
Affiliation:
Chair, Department of Health Studies, University of South Africa, Pretoria, South Africa
*
Author for correspondence: Professor Patricia Wilson, Primary and Community Care, Centre for Health Services Studies, University of Kent, Canterbury, CT2 7NF, UK. E-mail: p.m.wilson@kent.ac.uk
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Abstract

Community and public participation and involvement is an underpinning principle of primary health care, an essential component of a social justice-orientated approach to health care and a vehicle to improving health outcomes for patients, public and communities. However, influenced by history and context, there are intrinsic issues surrounding power imbalance and other barriers to partnerships between communities, public, policy makers and researchers. It is important to acknowledge these issues, and through doing so share experiences and learn from those working within very different settings.

In South Africa, community participation is seen as a route to decolonisation. It is also integral to the core functions of South African Higher Education Institutes, alongside teaching and research. In the UK, there has also been a history of participation and involvement as part of a social rights movement, but notably public involvement has become embedded in publicly funded health research as a policy imperative.

In this paper, we draw on our respective programmes of work in public and community participation and involvement. These include a South African community engagement project to reduce teenage pregnancy and HIV infection working through a partnership between teachers, students and university academics, and a national evaluation in England of public involvement in applied health research. We begin by highlighting the lack of clarity and terms used interchangeably to describe participation, engagement and involvement. Frameworks for partnership working with relevance to South Africa and the UK are then analysed, suggesting key themes of relationships, working together, and evaluation and monitoring. The South African project and examples of public involvement in English primary and community care research are examined through these themes. We conclude the paper by mapping out common enablers and barriers to partnership working within these very different contexts.

Type
Development
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2019

Introduction

Enabling community and public participation is an underpinning principle of primary health care and enshrined within the Alma Ata Declaration (World Health Organization, 1978). Community and public participation is seen as emblematic of postmodern democracies, a response to health care decisions failing to include the perspectives and views of the recipients (Entwistle et al., Reference Entwistle, Renfrew, Yearley, Forrester and Lamont1998). In lower- and middle-income countries, community and public participation is also seen as an essential element of a human rights-based approach (Marston et al., Reference Marston, Hinton, Kean, Baral, Ahuja, Costello and Portela2016) and as a process that guards against exploitation (Lavery et al., Reference Lavery, Tinadana, Scott, Harrington, Ramsey, Ytuarte-Nuñez and James2010). In countries such as South Africa, community and public participation is viewed as a way to decolonisation which is a process of obtaining social justice (Israel et al., Reference Israel, Eng, Schulz and Parker2012). However, this social justice-orientated approach to participation is just one rationale. An additional justification for community and public participation emerges from a consumerist (Stewart, Reference Stewart2013) or utilitarian perspective (Brunton et al., Reference Brunton, Thomas, O’Mara-Eves, Jamal, Oliver and Kavanagh2017). This argues that participation can lead to improved health outcomes (O’Mara-Eves et al., Reference O’Mara-Eves, Brunton, Oliver, Kavanagh, Jamal and Thomas2015; National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, 2016), with examples including improving maternal and neonatal health in Bangladesh (Marcil et al., Reference Marcil, Afsana and Perry2016) and managing epidemics such as Ebola (Laverack and Manoncourt, Reference Laverack and Manoncourt2016). Yet, these sometimes competing rationales have led to potential confusion and ‘terminological instability’ (Stewart, Reference Stewart2013), illustrated by terms such as participation, involvement, engagement and co-production being used interchangeably. This inconsistency is further compounded by differences in how those involved are defined including: how communities are demarcated; differences between public, citizens, consumers, stakeholders and users and levels of participation ranging from passive consultation to community-led initiatives (Arnstein, Reference Arnstein1969).

These different justifications and heterogeneous dynamics are mirrored in community and public participation in health-related research. Legitimacy has been framed by the ethical argument that individuals and communities have a right to be fully involved particularly when research interventions are being done ‘to’ them (Barnes and Cotterell, Reference Barnes, Cotterell, Barnes and Cotterell2012). Furthermore, the right to be involved developed further with a range of emancipatory approaches leading to user- or community-led research (Oliver, Reference Oliver1992). Alongside this argument, the justification that community and public participation leads to more relevant research with a greater chance of being implemented has resulted in public participation being increasingly embedded within policy and guidelines (Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Poland, Keenan, Howe, Munday, Kendall, Cowe, Staniszewska and Goodman2018). Examples include the requirements for patient and public involvement in the UK publicly funded health research (Staniszewska et al., Reference Staniszewska, Denegri, Matthews and Minogue2018) and the incorporation of community engagement within South Africa’s National Health Research Ethics Council’s guidelines for good practice in clinical research (MacQueen et al., Reference MacQueen, Bhan, Frohlich, Holzer and Sugarman2015).

The objective of this paper is to provide a cross-cultural analysis of the enablers and barriers to community participation and involvement in health care and research. The paper is based on the assumption that community and public participation is of inherent value and an ethical prerequisite despite lack of conceptual clarity and differences in contextual setting. However, we also acknowledge intrinsic issues surrounding power imbalance and other barriers to partnership between communities, public, policy makers and researchers (Brunger and Wall, Reference Brunger and Wall2016; Marston et al., Reference Marston, Hinton, Kean, Baral, Ahuja, Costello and Portela2016; McCollum et al., Reference McCollum, Taegtmeyer, Otiso, Muturi, Barasa, Molyneux, Martineau and Theobald2018). We explore similarities and differences in frequently used terms and develop a set of underlying principles to underpin our discussion. Drawing on our respective programmes of work, we compare and contrast approaches to community and public participation in primary and community care research and projects. While the work we describe is very different, we conclude the paper with key transferable lessons between the UK and South African primary care and community research settings.

Definitions

The plethora of terms used in this field not only reflects how value-laden it is (Stewart, Reference Stewart2013) but also regional differences and nuances in language. For example, in North America, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research’s Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research and the US Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute use the term engagement to describe the partnership approach aimed at enabling patient-identified priorities for research (Chudyk et al., Reference Chudyk, Waldman, Horrill, Demczuk, Shimmin, Stoddard, Hickes and Schultz2018). In the UK, public involvement in research is the predominate semantic, in which the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) national advisory group for public involvement (INVOLVE) defines as ‘research being carried out “with” or “by” members of the public rather than “to”, “about” or “for” them’ (Hayes et al., Reference Hayes, Buckland and Tarpey2012). In contrast, the UK understanding of engagement is limited to the provision and dissemination of information about research (https://www.invo.org.uk/resource-centre/jargon-buster/?letterE). In South African academic institutions, community and public participation is understood as community engagement, which is considered as one of the core functions of universities alongside teaching and research (Lazarus et al., Reference Lazarus, Erasmus, Hendricks, Nduna and Slamat2008).

However, community engagement is similarly poorly defined (Odugleh-Kolev and Parrish-Sprowl, Reference Odugleh-Kolev and Parrish-Sprowl2018) and known by a number of terms including community participation (Preston et al., Reference Preston, Waugh, Larkins and Taylor2010; George et al., Reference George, Mehra, Scott and Sriram2015). Tindana et al. (Reference Tindana, Singh, Tracy, Upshur, Daar, Singer, Frohlich and Lavery2007) suggest that community engagement in research goes beyond community participation; it is a process that requires collaborative working with partners who share goals and interests. While there is some terminological blurring with the World Health Organization’s concept of community development (Kang et al., Reference Kang, Shin and Matthews2016), at a World Health Organization (2017) workshop aimed at developing a community engagement framework, it was defined as a ‘process of developing relationships that enable stakeholders to work together to address health-related issues and promote well-being to achieve positive health impact and outcomes’. Definitional fluidity is perhaps inevitable as there is no standard definition of community (Tindana et al., Reference Tindana, Singh, Tracy, Upshur, Daar, Singer, Frohlich and Lavery2007). It may commonly demarcate a geographic area (eg, a remote rural community), but could also be used to characterise a group of people living with a particular health condition or a group sharing particular value systems and cultural characteristics (George et al., Reference George, Mehra, Scott and Sriram2015; Kang et al., Reference Kang, Shin and Matthews2016). In the South African health setting, community participation is mainly related to primary health care nurses and community health workers (currently called Ward-based Primary Health Care outreach team), who go out to the community or to the homes of community members to offer health-related information and care (Kironder and Kahirimbanyi, Reference Kironder and Kahirimbanyi2002). Other terms commonly used in South Africa include community outreach and community mobile teams.

Despite the difficulties in pinning down definitions, it is perhaps the level of participation, involvement or engagement (or whatever local term is used) that characterises differences in values and approaches most graphically. A number of conceptual frameworks have been developed to describe the spectrum of community and public involvement, for example, the IAP2 Spectrum of Public Participation (International Association of Public Participation, 2018) and Taylor et al.’s (Reference Taylor, Wilkinson and Cheers2008) four conceptual approaches to community participation. These are described as ‘contributions’ where external stakeholders facilitate and use contributions from the community; ‘instrumental’ with community participation as part of an intervention to improve health; ‘community empowerment’ underpinned by social action and ‘developmental’ as an evolutionary partnership process based on social justice. Most of these frameworks have roots and similarities to the seminal work of Arnstein (Reference Arnstein1969) who describes the range of levels as a ladder from non-participation/manipulation to ‘citizen-led control’. More recent work has questioned the linear nature of this ladder model, suggesting that different levels may occur at different stages of a research project (Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Keenan, McNeilly, Goodman, Howe, Poland, Staniszewska, Kendall, Munday, Cowe and Peckham2015). However, the concept of levels of involvement or participation is a useful one and if critically explored can unmask assumptions and covert power imbalance (Brunger and Wall, Reference Brunger and Wall2016).

In England, this critique was demonstrated in a commissioned review of public involvement in research (National Institute of Health Research, 2015). This recommended that co-production should provide the principles for the future NIHR approach to public involvement in research (Staniszewska et al., Reference Staniszewska, Denegri, Matthews and Minogue2018). Co-production is yet another term that is used interchangeably with others such as co-design and is conceptualised in nuanced ways. While co-design normally refers to collaborative planning and designing of health care services (and research) by patients/service users and clinicians/managers, co-production is an umbrella term denoting joint working between these groups and includes policy making, governance, design and delivery of care (Prior and Campbell, Reference Prior and Campbell2018; Baim-Lance et al.). The NIHR drew on the work of Boyle et al. (Reference Boyle, Coote, Sherwood and Slay2010) to develop guidelines for co-production of health research (INVOLVE, 2018). What clearly demarcates this approach to research is the overt sharing of power and joint ownership of the research by the public involved and the researchers (INVOLVE, 2018). While it is acknowledged that co-produced research may not be possible in all circumstances, it does demonstrate an intentioned shift ‘up the ladder’ of involvement.

Underpinning principles

We build on an earlier literature review conducted by one of the authors as part of the RAPPORT study, conducted 2012–2015 in England. Funded by the NIHR, the study sought to evaluate different approaches, impact and outcomes of partnership working within publicly funded health research. In particular, it sought to assess the mechanisms that lead to partnership working being routinely incorporated in the research process. The methodology and findings are reported elsewhere (Mathie et al., Reference Mathie, Wilson, Poland, McNeilly, Howe, Staniszewska, Cowe, Munday and Goodman2014; Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Keenan, McNeilly, Goodman, Howe, Poland, Staniszewska, Kendall, Munday, Cowe and Peckham2015; Howe et al., Reference Howe, Mathie, Munday, Cowe, Goodman, Keenan, Kendall, Poland, Staniszewska and Wilson2017; Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Poland, Keenan, Howe, Munday, Kendall, Cowe, Staniszewska and Goodman2018), but in summary a realist design was used (Pawson, Reference Pawson2013), which drew upon Normalization Process Theory (May et al., Reference May, Cummings, Girling, Bracher, Mair, May, Murray, Myall, Rapley and Finch2018) to understand how partnership working became embedded as normal practice. The review was updated, and grey literature included through searches on Open Grey. Our purpose was to identify exemplar frameworks that could illuminate practices relevant to the UK and South Africa health care and research environments. We included papers and reports on community engagement or participation, public involvement in research or co-production of health research that were:

  • Published in English from 2009 onwards

  • Included frameworks or best practice guidelines applicable to the UK and South Africa.

In Table 1, we summarise the main principles from the exemplar frameworks and best practice guidelines.

Table 1. Examples of frameworks and best practice guidelines for public involvement, community engagement and co-production of health and health research

Abbreviations: PI – public involvement, CE – community engagement.

An analysis of these principles suggests three main themes – relationships, working together and evaluation and monitoring.

Relationships

Developing and sustaining relationships based on trust are commonly described as the foundation for public involvement and community engagement. These relationships are characterised by mutual respect (Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Keenan, McNeilly, Goodman, Howe, Poland, Staniszewska, Kendall, Munday, Cowe and Peckham2015; National Institute for Health Research, 2017) and include the need to understand the community’s perspective (Lavery et al., Reference Lavery, Tinadana, Scott, Harrington, Ramsey, Ytuarte-Nuñez and James2010). Relationships also need time to develop (Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Keenan, McNeilly, Goodman, Howe, Poland, Staniszewska, Kendall, Munday, Cowe and Peckham2015; National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, 2016), and as such involvement and engagement needs to be started as early as possible in the project or initiative (Lavery et al., Reference Lavery, Tinadana, Scott, Harrington, Ramsey, Ytuarte-Nuñez and James2010; Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Keenan, McNeilly, Goodman, Howe, Poland, Staniszewska, Kendall, Munday, Cowe and Peckham2015; National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, 2016). Authentic relationships require accessible and inclusive opportunities (National Institute for Health Research, 2017) to ensure that public and community members are those most likely to be able to speak for and link with their peers (Lavery et al., Reference Lavery, Tinadana, Scott, Harrington, Ramsey, Ytuarte-Nuñez and James2010; Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Keenan, McNeilly, Goodman, Howe, Poland, Staniszewska, Kendall, Munday, Cowe and Peckham2015; National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, 2016). Developing authentic relationships also requires specific communication skills on the part of the external stakeholder (National Institute for Health Research, 2017; World Health Organization, 2017). In the UK research environment, these skills may be seen as the remit of one person within a research team, but the evidence suggests that for involvement to be embedded as normal practice, all research members need to be part of the partnership with involved public and patients (Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Poland, Keenan, Howe, Munday, Kendall, Cowe, Staniszewska and Goodman2018). Clear communication and providing feedback between the relevant parties are identified in a number of the guidelines and frameworks (Lavery et al., Reference Lavery, Tinadana, Scott, Harrington, Ramsey, Ytuarte-Nuñez and James2010; Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Keenan, McNeilly, Goodman, Howe, Poland, Staniszewska, Kendall, Munday, Cowe and Peckham2015; National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, 2016; National Institute for Health Research, 2017). Trust is also facilitated by sharing a clear purpose and goals for public involvement and community engagement (Lavery et al., Reference Lavery, Tinadana, Scott, Harrington, Ramsey, Ytuarte-Nuñez and James2010; Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Keenan, McNeilly, Goodman, Howe, Poland, Staniszewska, Kendall, Munday, Cowe and Peckham2015; World Health Organization, 2017). However, a lack of clarity around the relationship affects participation, often rendering the community as passive recipients who have very little to no say in the process of participation and what they need (Brunton et al., Reference Brunton, Thomas, O’Mara-Eves, Jamal, Oliver and Kavanagh2017). The literature on community participation commonly highlights the working relationship as an issue. The community acts as observers, while health care practitioners take the leading role. Most of the time, the community members’ roles would only be to invite the people to the venue, while the primary health care workers conduct all the key functioning related to partnership, including giving instructions to community members, negatively impacting the sustainability of the partnership (Wallerstein and Duran, Reference Wallerstein and Duran2006).

Working together

Closely linked to sustainable relationships are the ways researchers, public, external stakeholders and communities work together. There is a strong theme of reciprocity, a recognition of equal value of all perspectives (National Institute for Health Research, 2017) and adopting an assets-based approach (Boyle et al., Reference Boyle, Coote, Sherwood and Slay2010; Lavery et al., Reference Lavery, Tinadana, Scott, Harrington, Ramsey, Ytuarte-Nuñez and James2010). The way of working is also influenced by the level of public involvement and community engagement. In the latter, community empowerment approaches implicitly shift the balance of power to the community (Taylor et al., Reference Taylor, Wilkinson and Cheers2008), and in research, co-production requires a sharing of power through the joint ownership of research (Lavery et al., Reference Lavery, Tinadana, Scott, Harrington, Ramsey, Ytuarte-Nuñez and James2010; INVOLVE, 2018).

In multi-ethnic, multilingual countries such as South Africa, it is sometimes challenging when people who are engaged in community engagement are from a different ethnicity with different cultural values and beliefs. This often leads to misunderstanding and, instead of bringing positive outcomes, can result in a negative impact on the project.

Evaluation and monitoring

Several guidelines and frameworks highlight the need for ongoing evaluation and monitoring of public involvement and community engagement if best processes and outcomes are to be achieved (Lavery et al., Reference Lavery, Tinadana, Scott, Harrington, Ramsey, Ytuarte-Nuñez and James2010; Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Keenan, McNeilly, Goodman, Howe, Poland, Staniszewska, Kendall, Munday, Cowe and Peckham2015; National Institute for Health Research, 2017; World Health Organization, 2017). However, this is not without challenge as there are methodological difficulties in assessing the impact of public involvement in research (Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Keenan, McNeilly, Goodman, Howe, Poland, Staniszewska, Kendall, Munday, Cowe and Peckham2015) and community engagement (Preston et al., Reference Preston, Waugh, Larkins and Taylor2010). From the social justice perspective, there is also some ongoing debate whether it is appropriate to evaluate the ‘moral right’ to be involved as an intervention (Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Poland, Keenan, Howe, Munday, Kendall, Cowe, Staniszewska and Goodman2018). In reality, the processes and outcomes of most partnership working are not known. Commonly, this is because community partnership becomes just a once-off event or only conducted to meet the organisational needs or plans. It becomes like a tickbox action on the part of the initiating institution or department without any follow-up of the impact as monitoring and evaluation are not built into the project plan (Szilagyi et al., Reference Szilagyi, Shone, Dozier, Newton, Green and Bennett2014).

Relationships and ways of working demonstrate some level of partnership, and from herein, we use the term ‘partnership working’ to describe public involvement in research, and community participation and engagement. Henceforth, we also use the term ‘public’ or ‘community partners’. We now provide examples of partnership working from the English primary and community research context and community partnership with schools in South Africa.

Partnership working in English health research: examples from a national evaluation

Within the RAPPORT study, 22 studies were followed over 18 months to track partnership working processes and outcomes (Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Keenan, McNeilly, Goodman, Howe, Poland, Staniszewska, Kendall, Munday, Cowe and Peckham2015). Examples of three studies based in the primary or community settings are now presented, with an analysis of their relative strengths and weaknesses through the lenses of relationships, working together and evaluation. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews and document review using a realist approach (Marchal et al., Reference Marchal, McDamien and Kegels2010; Manzano, Reference Manzano2016). Interviews were digitally recorded, transcribed and analysed using a framework approach (Gale et al., Reference Gale, Heath, Cameron, Rashid and Redwood2013). A breakdown of participants is presented in Table 2.

Table 2. Study participants

Study 1: Trial of self-help materials for the prevention of smoking relapse: randomised controlled trial with parallel qualitative study

Two public partners were part of the trial steering group, with a third partner consulted on the intervention booklets. In addition, a local established public partners group advised on participant information materials submitted to the relevant research ethics committee. Impact from all their involvement included refinement of the self-help booklets to be better tailored for the target population and improved clarity of participant materials.

In terms of relationships and working together, the lead researcher had little experience in working in partnership with the public. Their main motive for partnership working was the requirement from the funder; in the UK, publicly funded applied health research grants will not be awarded without partnership working. The lead researcher was not convinced of the value of partnership working, perceiving there to be a lack of evidence of positive impact on research:

…researchers want evidence (on value of partnership working) and that’s the holy grail, and I haven’t seen it yet…

The lead researcher also questioned the costs associated with partnership working, including time and fees to public partners for their contributions. This rather negative view resulted in superficial levels of partnership working, mainly through one-off consultations. This led to disengagement by public partners who removed themselves from the study.

Study 2: Physical activity in older people in primary care: randomised controlled trial

This study had been preceded by a pilot study, and participants from the pilot provided input into the development of intervention through a series of focus groups. Another group of public partners was bought together as a focus group to contribute to participant information before submission to the ethics committee. Throughout the study, a public partner from a local community voluntary service was a member of the study advisory group. Partnership working impact on this study included a change in the images and terminology on participant information (public partners had raised concerns about potential ‘ageism’). The lead researcher also attributed considerable changes to the study design to partnership working.

This study demonstrated the blurring of boundaries between qualitative research (focus groups) and partnership working. This has been highlighted as a potential issue if the purpose is not clear (Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Keenan, McNeilly, Goodman, Howe, Poland, Staniszewska, Kendall, Munday, Cowe and Peckham2015). If data are being collected through qualitative methods, this is clearly research rather than partnership working, even if it has potential to contribute to partnership working through enabling the public and community perspective to be explored (Rolfe et al., Reference Rolfe, Ramsden, Banner and Graham2018). Many of the researchers in this team saw working together interchangeably as partnership working and study participation. However, the public partner member of the study advisory group who was involved solely in the project governance saw her contribution to partnership working as a service to her local community and fundamental to research:

I think it’s (partnership working) fundamental to the research inquiry…it’s not just added value, it’s intrinsic to the inquiry.

There was demonstrable positive impact on the study through partnership working. One of the strong features was the relationships between the lead researcher, research nurse and public partners. The research nurse had been the main contact with the preceding pilot study participants, which facilitated the participation of 60 people in the ‘trial design development’ focus groups. As way of evaluation and monitoring, the research team recorded all partnership working contributions and subsequent changes. However, these changes were not systematically fed back to public partners.

Study 3: Evaluation of peer-led interventions for parents of children with intellectual and developmental disabilities: a systematic review and qualitative study

This study was based in an established research centre that continuously worked with a large group of parents as public partners. Working together was characterised by co-production. The research idea had come from the parents, and a subgroup was formed of parents and researchers to jointly work together at each stage of the project. The impact of this partnership working included changing the study design, improving recruitment to the qualitative study, increased relevance of outcome measures, parents setting the inclusion criteria for the review and dissemination of findings. This study also had a significant impact on the public partners themselves, reporting increased self-worth and knowledge of health services and providing a respite from the daily care of their child.

A ‘family coordinator’, who the lead researcher described as being the bridge between the research and parent worlds, facilitated the relationship between the public partners and researchers:

…she knows enough about research to be able to explain what we do, but equally doesn’t know enough that she can challenge me or others in the team to explain more clearly what we’re asking of families. And I think that’s probably the greatest reason for our success has been the sort of creation of that role and the development of it

However, while the coordinator dealt with the day-to-day work with parents, the whole research team was committed to partnership working and many had applied to work at the centre because of the long-established co-production model.

In addition to this sustained relationship maintained over time through working together and regular social events, there was reimbursement for parents’ time and a training and support programme. However, this level of partnership working required not only skills and commitment but also financial resources, which many other studies within the RAPPORT evaluation lacked. These financial resources also freed up staff time to conduct evaluation and ensured feedback to public partners on how their input had impact.

Partnership working in South Africa: a community engagement project with schools

Enhancing HIV prevention among learners in Limpopo was a collaborative project between the members of the Department of Health Studies at the University of South Africa and the schools in the Soutpansberg North Circuit. The background to the project was that learners at rural schools continued to be infected with HIV despite the currently offered HIV/AIDS Life Orientation programme at schools, with the programme failing to address the social, economic and cultural context of these learners. The community engagement project focused on developing and translating an HIV/AIDS education toolkit into the local languages used by learners. Teachers together with academics developed the initial content. However, the final content was co-designed by academics, educators and learners who were actively involved during the pilot phase of the toolkit. The language used was that of the learners; the common parlance from their daily lives and aspects addressed included focusing on what learners’ experience daily. Roles were agreed as the teacher being just a facilitator, while learners led the discussion and demonstrations, for example, demonstration of condom use and also disposal. This resulted in mutual respect and taking ownership. Due to the reciprocity in the relationship, participants, especially learners, were able to share their experiences, challenges and also factors which contributed to their engagement in HIV risky sexual behaviour. This helped to identify contextual data and the planning of a relevant intervention which was acceptable to all participants. All the stakeholders kept to their roles, ensuring that the programme’s objectives were achieved. For example, the academics were fully involved in fundraising to provide learners with school uniforms, sanitary towels and clothes. This was in response to learners suggesting that they became sexually active because of the lack of these items. The relationship developed between all stakeholders resulted in a commitment by learners to change their sexual behaviour and improved their school attendance. The project also influenced educators to continue to use participatory approaches within HIV/AIDS education. When the project started in 2014, out of 183 learners aged 6–18 years, there were 25 learners who were pregnant. This had been a trend for a number of years, and it had become an expected norm that girls above 12 years old were pregnant. However, two years after the project commenced, there were no pregnant learners at school and this trend has been sustained up to 2018. Policy makers are now taking note of the programme, and it is being rolled out to other schools.

Enablers and challenges in partnership working

Our respective partnership working has been conducted in significantly different settings, with large variation in resources available, public and community partners involved, and overall aims of the projects. However, all the work we have described can be looked through the social justice and utilitarian lenses, giving voice and a participatory role to those involved in the projects and harnessing this voice and role to improve health outcomes. The examples of partnership working across such a broad landscape also reveal a number of common enablers and barriers.

Enablers

Mutual benefit

Both partners should be able to benefit from the project. For example, in the project on HIV prevention among learners in Limpopo Province, the community, especially the teachers, benefited from the project. The project enabled them to teach learners contextually relevant HIV prevention messages and approaches, leading to a reduction in the risk of HIV infection among learners. Healthy learners attend schools more regularly, and their performance improves. This positively affects the pass rate, bringing esteem to the teacher, the school and the community. The learners who have performed well are able to access the university which is a partner in the project. Students who have good attainment from school perform better, improving the university ratings, which contributes to sustained funding. This enables the university to fully commit to community engagement projects thus forming a cycle of mutual benefit.

This virtuous cycle of mutual benefit was also a finding in the RAPPORT study. While resource-intensive, working in partnership led to improved research prioritisation and identification of questions, design and research outcomes. It also enhanced self-esteem of public partners and the researchers. Working together became cyclical, with those involved developing ideas and design of future projects based on their experiences of the one they were currently involved in (Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Keenan, McNeilly, Goodman, Howe, Poland, Staniszewska, Kendall, Munday, Cowe and Peckham2015).

Mutual benefit is also enhanced if the project has relevancy for all those involved. In the Limpopo Province HIV prevention among learners project, the relevance of the work was clearly identifiable. However, in the RAPPORT study, there were some studies where public partners questioned the relevance for them. Nevertheless, partnership working could address relevancy. For example, the outcome measures used within a study on rheumatoid arthritis were questioned by public partners and more patient-relevant measures were introduced. The relevance of the project needs to be identified at the start to ensure a receptive environment and ‘buy-in’ of those involved, but equally as the project progresses (and as shown by the South African example) there should be an iterative and flexible approach to ensure the project is adapted to maintain relevance.

Resources

Partnership working is resource-intensive, not least in the time and commitment required by all involved. This commitment was demonstrated in the South African example with academics joining in fundraising events. Similar examples were also found in the RAPPORT study, with academics fundraising for charities to enable grant awards. In the RAPPORT study, there were examples of very well-resourced research centres that had sustained funding for partnership working leads and activities. However, there were other examples where there was little to no funding for partnership working, and meaningful working together relied on commitment of all those involved, and most importantly on trusting relationships. While not ideal, this is often the reality, particularly when starting out in partnership working. However, as described in the HIV prevention among learners in Limpopo Province project, mutual benefit for all those involved leads to sustained support from partners to ensure that the objectives of partnership are achieved. In the RAPPORT study, we also found that sustained support through trusting relationships was further enabled through mutual agreement of the roles of all involved and the purpose of partnership working.

Barriers

Limited time

In both the South African and UK examples, time was one of the most precious resources required for partnership working. In RAPPORT case studies, time was needed to develop initial relationships with public partners, often during the pre-grant award period. Time was also needed to maintain these relationships throughout the project period and beyond. Paradoxically, this time-intensive work was often needed most when the research team was most constrained in time, working towards a grant application deadline or during the busy project set-up period or writing up. In the HIV prevention among learners in Limpopo Province project, competing demands on time included delivering and learning the rest of the curriculum for teachers and learners, and working on the project among other university commitments for the academics. Participatory approaches within projects are also time-intensive including the organising and running of workshops and integrating their outcomes into the project. Commitment and careful planning are required to overcome this barrier.

Sudden attrition of partners especially the vision holders

To embed what may be a new way of working to those involved requires a champion or vision holder. The RAPPORT study found a number of these key people, including lead researchers, partnership working coordinators or members of patient organisations. In teams where this vision of partnership working was held by all, then the approach was sustained and well embedded throughout all activities. However, where reliant on one person within a team, any loss of this role could result in the demise of partnership working into one that was tokenistic at best.

Conclusion

We have explored the differing definitions and environments within which partnership working can work. While there were differences in the purpose of the projects we described, the basic principles apply to them all. The examples presented were all underpinned by a rationale of social justice and utilitarianism, but shaped by history and culture. Nevertheless, we found commonalities in enablers and barriers to partnership working, and the potential for mutual learning. Partnership working in LMICs such as South Africa provides exemplars of innovative participatory approaches firmly shaped within the social justice paradigm, but with utilitarian outcomes for community health. Our experiences of partnership working in England can also provide lessons on what needs to be done to embed such practices as policy (Wilson et al., Reference Wilson, Mathie, Poland, Keenan, Howe, Munday, Kendall, Cowe, Staniszewska and Goodman2018).

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank members of the public and researchers who participated in the RAPPORT study, and the learners, teachers and academics who worked together on the Limpopo Province HIV prevention among learners project.

Authors’ Contribution

PW was chief investigator for the RAPPORT study, AHMM co-led the Limpopo Province HIV prevention among learners project. PW and AHMM drafted the paper and approved the final version.

Financial Support

This development paper was partially based on a study that received funding from the National Institute of Health Research.

Conflicts of Interest

None.

Ethical Standards

The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the Health Research Authority (UK) and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008. Written informed consent was obtained from all participants in the RAPPORT study.

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Table 1. Examples of frameworks and best practice guidelines for public involvement, community engagement and co-production of health and health research

Figure 1

Table 2. Study participants