Community engagement approaches to improve health: a cross-case study analysis of barriers and facilitators in UK practice

Article


Bagnall, A-M., South, J., Kinsella, K., Trigwell, J., Sheridan, K. and Harden, A. 2025. Community engagement approaches to improve health: a cross-case study analysis of barriers and facilitators in UK practice. BMC Public Health. 25 (Art. 747). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-21902-5
AuthorsBagnall, A-M., South, J., Kinsella, K., Trigwell, J., Sheridan, K. and Harden, A.
Abstract

Background
Interventions that engage communities have been shown to improve health and wellbeing in disadvantaged groups internationally, but there is little evidence on current community-led practice, particularly in relation to the process of community engagement. This paper presents a qualitative cross-case analysis of barriers & facilitators in six UK community engagement projects, using different models of community engagement.

Methods
The primary sampling criteria was the type of approach to community engagement, using a conceptual framework with four main groups: Strengthening communities; Volunteer and peer roles; Collaborations and partnerships; Connecting to community resources. Qualitative interview-based methods (semi-structured interviews and focus groups) explored community and professional perspectives in depth. Thematic analysis was used to analyse the data, building within-case studies before comparing findings and using an iterative process to build explanations in a cross-case analysis.

Results
Fifty-five people (28 community stakeholders and 27 professional stakeholders) from six selected case study projects took part in the research. Key themes related to successful community engagement were: trust within the community and between community members and service providers; respect for community members’ expertise; allowing sufficient time for relationships to establish and for outcomes to be seen; commitment of key people; and flexibility.

Conclusions
This qualitative case study research found that in successful community engagement projects, community expertise is respected and valued, allowing community members to be fully involved and take ownership of the projects. Sufficient time should be allowed for this process. Flexibility and adaptation of project materials, protocols and role descriptions is important in overcoming barriers to community engagement.

JournalBMC Public Health
Journal citation25 (Art. 747)
ISSN1471-2458
Year2025
PublisherSpringer Nature
Publisher's version
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File Access Level
Anyone
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-21902-5
Publication dates
Online24 Feb 2025
Publication process dates
Accepted11 Feb 2025
Deposited14 May 2025
Copyright holder© 2025 The Authors
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