To identify stakeholder perceived challenges and facilitators for implementing a clean fuel and clean stove intervention to reduce household air pollution and hypertension in Lagos, Nigeria.
Qualitative study guided by the Exploration and Preparation phases of the Exploration, Preparation, Implementation, and Sustainment (EPIS) framework, using focus group discussions and in-depth semi-structured interviews with inductive and deductive thematic analysis.
Peri-urban communities across the five administrative divisions of Lagos State, Nigeria.
128 stakeholders from 32 communities, including community, religious, market and youth leaders, primary healthcare staff, and household decision makers. Approximately half were female.
This was a pre-implementation needs assessment that included demonstrations of the clean stove and fuel.
Thematic domains describing barriers and enablers to adoption and implementation, mapped to EPIS inner, outer, and bridging factors.
Stakeholders reported barriers that included stove stacking, upfront stove cost, concerns about long-term fuel price and availability, equipment durability and maintenance, safety, mistrust of new technology, and uncertainty about stove performance for dishes requiring high heat and long cooking times. Reported facilitators included payment flexibility and subsidies, opportunities to test the stove, perceived benefits of cleaner and faster cooking with less soot, endorsement by community leaders, and interest in local retail and distribution to improve access.
Implementation planning for clean fuel and clean stove programmes should address affordability, reliable fuel supply chains, durability and service, culturally relevant cooking needs, and trust building through community leadership. These findings inform adaptation strategies for scale-up in similar low-resource settings.