Baker Ml, Bednarczyk Ra, Kaul P, Eluf-Neto J, Juma M, Ohkubo S, Villa L, Crowley T, Diakite M, Igras S, Williams Jt, Stellenberg El, Figueroa-Downing D, Hofmeyr Gj, Chiang Ed, Nelly Muiruri, Linton A, Moses Mwangi Gitonga, Peters M, Sheeder J, Evans Dp, Lundgren R, Ernest Muthami Mutua, Citeya A, Joyce Jebet Cheptum, Hammond C, Tshitenge S, Harlan S, Mentrop L, Limaye R, Ganiyu A, and Baggio Ml
In West Africa, social factors influence whether couples with unmet need for family planning act on birth-spacing desires. Tékponon Jikuagou is testing a social network-based intervention to reduce social barriers by diffusing new ideas. Individuals and groups judged socially influential by their communities provide entrée to networks. A participatory social network mapping methodology was designed to identify these diffusion actors. Analysis of monitoring data, in-depth interviews, and evaluation reports assessed the methodology's acceptability to communities and staff and whether it produced valid, reliable data to identify influential individuals and groups who diffuse new ideas through their networks. Results indicated the methodology's acceptability. Communities were actively and equitably engaged. Staff appreciated its ability to yield timely, actionable information. The mapping methodology also provided valid and reliable information by enabling communities to identify highly connected and influential network actors. Consistent with social network theory, this methodology resulted in the selection of informal groups and individuals in both informal and formal positions. In-depth interview data suggest these actors were diffusing new ideas, further confirming their influence/connectivity. The participatory methodology generated insider knowledge of who has social influence, challenging commonly held assumptions. Collecting and displaying information fostered staff and community learning, laying groundwork for social change.