Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/136559
Title: Using qualitative research in community engagement to capture and mitigate vulnerability mechanisms in the face of infectious diseases : insights from a research-based program in five European countries during the Covid-19 pandemic
Authors: Geise, Mandy
Osborne, Jacob
Grohma, Paul
Giles-Vernick, Tamara
Lana, Benedetta
Diagne, Papa Mamadou
Ocek, Zeliha
Cebron, Ursula Lipovec
Vodopivec, Neza
Brunec, Anja
Baldacchino, Jean Paul
Said, Maurice
Orsini, Gisella
Sultana, Victoria
Vaccaro, Concetta
Volkmann, Anna-Maria
Kutalek, Ruth
Dückers, Michel
Keywords: COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020-2023
Communicable diseases -- Malta
Communicable diseases -- France
Communicable diseases -- Germany
Communicable diseases -- Italy
Communicable diseases -- Slovenia
Communities
Sex differences
Issue Date: 2025
Publisher: Sage Publications, Inc.
Citation: Geise, M., Osborne, J., Grohma, P., Giles-Vernick, T., Lana, B., Diagne, P. M.,... Dückers, M. (2025). Using qualitative research in community engagement to capture and mitigate vulnerability mechanisms in the face of infectious diseases : insights from a research-based program in five European countries during the Covid-19 pandemic. Qualitative Health Research, 10.1177/10497323251346407
Abstract: Various frameworks have been proposed for carrying out community engagement (CE) in the context of infectious disease response, but few have done so through a lens of vulnerability and even fewer, if any, have compared cases across countries. This paper reflects on the implementation of a project based on social science research and CE to capture and mitigate vulnerability mechanisms, which was carried out in France, Germany, Italy, Malta, and Slovenia during the COVID-19 pandemic. Using qualitative data collected through interviews, a focus group discussion, and project meetings, we describe how a stepwise CE process was carried out in the context of an international, multi-sectoral project. As such, this paper sheds light on the applicability of the methodology, the strategies followed, and overlapping themes encountered during the CE implementation. In all five countries, researchers created overviews of multiple vulnerability case descriptions situated in communities affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. Several recurring themes played a role in the CE process in the different settings: the challenges of finding, defining, and working with(in) communities; the role and position of researchers “in action”; stakeholders and power dynamics; timing of stakeholder involvement; translating qualitative data on vulnerability mechanisms into practical solutions; and sustainability and institutional integration. It is important to consider these themes when planning future initiatives to apply social and behavioral science methods to address and mitigate vulnerabilities in communities confronted with pandemics or other crisis contexts.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/136559
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacArtAS



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