R21TW012563
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Pilot feasibility study of the WHO Lay Health Worker Dementia Care, with Internal Facilitation (WLDC+IF) in rural Uganda - abstract
There is paucity of information on culturally tailored implementation strategies to promote interventions for people with dementia and their caregivers from LMICs, and yet dementia is a growing concern in resource limited settings (e.g., Uganda).
Approximately 80% of Uganda’s population resides in the rural areas where awareness about dementia is limited.
The proportion of households in rural Uganda with at least one older adult =60 years is 23.2%, and yet data on the prevalence of dementia in Uganda is scarce.
While the hallmark of comprehensive dementia care should include early detection, management plan, and family caregivers support, dementia awareness and support services are virtually non-existent in Uganda.
The World Health Organization (WHO) developed the Dementia Toolkit for Community Workers, consisting of evidence-based practices for early detection and management of dementia and caregiver support.
However, the toolkit has not been adopted because there is lack of an appropriate and effective implementation strategy.
Uganda’s decentralized health delivery system leverages indigenous Lay Health Workers (LHWs) at the village level to address the human resources shortage countrywide.
Working with an indigenous member of the community to support implementation of interventions is a potentially effective strategy.
In our prior work, we demonstrated that training LHWs in the WHO Dementia Care Toolkit was feasible.
However, subsequent implementation and delivery of dementia care was minimal and highly variable because there is lack of an appropriate and effective implementation strategy.
Our overall objective in this proposal is to develop and evaluate the feasibility of a culturally tailored implementation strategy consisting of the WHO Dementia Toolkit by indigenous village-based LHWs to provide dementia care at village level, supported by internal facilitation from indigenous has as supervisors: the “WHO Lay Health Worker Dementia Care, with Internal Facilitation (WLDC+IF)”.
Our proposition is that internal facilitation by indigenous providers is feasible in achieving adoption and implementation of WHO evidence-based dementia care by village-based LHWs in rural settings.
The pilot feasibility study is informed by the Integrated Promoting Action on Research Implementation in Health Services (I-PARIHS) framework.
The framework allows us to use internal facilitation as an ‘active ingredient’ to integrate action around the innovation, and recipients within the local, organizational and wider health system context to enable successful adoption of WLDC+IF.
We will co-design an implementation strategy guide for the WLDC+IF (Aim1), and evaluate feasibility of the implementation strategy consisting of WLDC+IF (Aim 2).
Our expected outcomes are to establish the feasibility, acceptability, adoption, fidelity, and appropriateness of a culturally tailored implementation strategy for dementia care at village level by indigenous community members.
There is paucity of information on culturally tailored implementation strategies to promote interventions for people with dementia and their caregivers from LMICs, and yet dementia is a growing concern in resource limited settings (e.g., Uganda).
Approximately 80% of Uganda’s population resides in the rural areas where awareness about dementia is limited.
The proportion of households in rural Uganda with at least one older adult =60 years is 23.2%, and yet data on the prevalence of dementia in Uganda is scarce.
While the hallmark of comprehensive dementia care should include early detection, management plan, and family caregivers support, dementia awareness and support services are virtually non-existent in Uganda.
The World Health Organization (WHO) developed the Dementia Toolkit for Community Workers, consisting of evidence-based practices for early detection and management of dementia and caregiver support.
However, the toolkit has not been adopted because there is lack of an appropriate and effective implementation strategy.
Uganda’s decentralized health delivery system leverages indigenous Lay Health Workers (LHWs) at the village level to address the human resources shortage countrywide.
Working with an indigenous member of the community to support implementation of interventions is a potentially effective strategy.
In our prior work, we demonstrated that training LHWs in the WHO Dementia Care Toolkit was feasible.
However, subsequent implementation and delivery of dementia care was minimal and highly variable because there is lack of an appropriate and effective implementation strategy.
Our overall objective in this proposal is to develop and evaluate the feasibility of a culturally tailored implementation strategy consisting of the WHO Dementia Toolkit by indigenous village-based LHWs to provide dementia care at village level, supported by internal facilitation from indigenous has as supervisors: the “WHO Lay Health Worker Dementia Care, with Internal Facilitation (WLDC+IF)”.
Our proposition is that internal facilitation by indigenous providers is feasible in achieving adoption and implementation of WHO evidence-based dementia care by village-based LHWs in rural settings.
The pilot feasibility study is informed by the Integrated Promoting Action on Research Implementation in Health Services (I-PARIHS) framework.
The framework allows us to use internal facilitation as an ‘active ingredient’ to integrate action around the innovation, and recipients within the local, organizational and wider health system context to enable successful adoption of WLDC+IF.
We will co-design an implementation strategy guide for the WLDC+IF (Aim1), and evaluate feasibility of the implementation strategy consisting of WLDC+IF (Aim 2).
Our expected outcomes are to establish the feasibility, acceptability, adoption, fidelity, and appropriateness of a culturally tailored implementation strategy for dementia care at village level by indigenous community members.
Funding Goals
THE JOHN E. FOGARTY INTERNATIONAL CENTER (FIC) SUPPORTS RESEARCH AND RESEARCH TRAINING TO REDUCE DISPARITIES IN GLOBAL HEALTH AND TO FOSTER PARTNERSHIPS BETWEEN U.S. SCIENTISTS AND THEIR COUNTERPARTS ABROAD. FIC SUPPORTS BASIC BIOLOGICAL, BEHAVIORAL, AND SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH, AS WELL AS RELATED RESEARCH TRAINING AND CAREER DEVELOPMENT. THE RESEARCH PORTFOLIO IS DIVIDED INTO SEVERAL PROGRAMS THAT SUPPORT A WIDE VARIETY OF FUNDING MECHANISMS TO MEET PROGRAMMATIC OBJECTIVES.
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
California
United States
Geographic Scope
State-Wide
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 129% from $124,251 to $284,805.
Mbarara University Of Science And Technology was awarded
Rural Uganda Dementia Care Pilot Study: WLDC+IF Implementation Strategy
Project Grant R21TW012563
worth $284,805
from Fogarty International Center in April 2024 with work to be completed primarily in California United States.
The grant
has a duration of 1 year 9 months and
was awarded through assistance program 93.989 International Research and Research Training.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity Dissemination and Implementation Research in Health (R21 Clinical Trial Optional).
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 1/21/25
Period of Performance
4/1/24
Start Date
1/31/26
End Date
Funding Split
$284.8K
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$284.8K
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to R21TW012563
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
R21TW012563
SAI Number
R21TW012563-2588270245
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Non-Domestic (Non-U.S.) Entity
Awarding Office
75NF00 NIH FOGARTY INTERNATIONAL CENTER
Funding Office
75NF00 NIH FOGARTY INTERNATIONAL CENTER
Awardee UEI
HWXLSV26ZLC3
Awardee CAGE
SET51
Performance District
CA-90
Senators
Dianne Feinstein
Alejandro Padilla
Alejandro Padilla
Modified: 1/21/25