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The effectiveness of community-based social innovations for healthy ageing in middle- and high-income countries: a systematic review

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posted on 2025-08-01, 08:10 authored by I Ghiga, E Pitchforth, L Lepetit, C Miani, GC Ali, C Meads
Background: Community-based social innovations (CBSIs) are one type of intervention that may help to address the complex needs of ageing populations globally. Methods: We conducted a systematic review of CBSIs for healthy ageing in middle- and high-income countries, including any CBSI that aimed to empower people aged 50 and over by motivating them to take initiative for their own health and wellbeing. The protocol was registered with Prospero (CRD 42016051622). A comprehensive search was conducted in 15 academic databases and advanced search in Google. We included published studies from 2000 onwards in any language. Exploratory meta-analysis was conducted for quantitative studies reporting similar outcomes, and qualitative studies were analysed using thematic analysis. Narrative synthesis was conducted. Searches yielded 13,262 unique hits, from which 44 papers met the inclusion criteria. Results: Most studies reported interventions having positive impacts on participants, such as reduced depression, though the majority of studies were classified as being at medium or high risk of bias. There was no evidence on costs or cost-effectiveness and very little reporting of outcomes at an organization or system level. CBSIs have the potential for positive impacts, but with nearly half of studies coming from high-income urban settings (particularly the United Kingdom and the United States of America), there is a lack of generalizisaability of these findings. Conclusions: Our research highlights the need to improve reporting of CBSIs as complex interventions, and for improved conceptualization of these interventions to inform research and practice.

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© The Author(s) 2020. Article reuse guidelines: sagepub.com/journals-permissions

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This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via the DOI in this record

Journal

Journal of Health Services Research and Policy

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SAGE Publications / Royal Society of Medicine Press

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2019-11-27T09:11:13Z

FOA date

2020-04-23T14:32:42Z

Citation

Published online 6 April 2020

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