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Health Promotion International Advance Access published online on June 13, 2009

Health Promotion International, doi:10.1093/heapro/dap017
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© The Author (2009). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Article

Micro grants as a stimulus for community action in residential health programmes: a case study

M. Schmidt*, T. Plochg, J. Harting, N. S. Klazinga and K. Stronks

Social Medicine, AMC/UvA, PO Box 22660, Amsterdam 1100DD, The Netherlands

* Corresponding author. E-mail: m.schmidt{at}amc.uva.nl


   Abstract

This paper aimed to explore the contribution of a micro grant financing scheme to community action in terms of residential health-promoting initiatives, interorganizational collaboration and public participation. The scheme was two-fold, consisting of (i) micro grants of 500–3500 Euros, which were easily obtainable by local organizations and (ii) neighbourhood health panels of community and health workers, functioning as a distributing mechanism. Data were collected using three methods: (i) observations of the neighbourhood-based health panels, (ii) in-depth interviews with policy-makers and professionals and (iii) analyses of documents and reports. This study demonstrated the three-fold role of micro grants as a vehicle to enable community action at an organizational level in terms of increased network activities between the local organizations, to set an agenda for the ‘health topic’ in non-traditional health agencies and to enable a number of health-promoting initiatives. Although these initiatives were attended by small groups of residents normally considered hard to reach, the actual public participation was limited. In their role as a distributing mechanism, the health panels were vital with regard to the achieved impact on the community action. However, certain limitations were also seen, which were related to the governance of the panels. This case study provides evidence to suggest that micro grants have the potential to stimulate community action at an organizational and a residential level, but with the prerequisite that grants be accompanied by increased investments in infrastructure.

Key words: micro grants; community action; health programmes


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