community (strongly agreed to by eight out of ten respondents). The parallel items for all of the participating intervention communities were strongly endorsed by far fewer of the respondents (four out of ten strongly agreed with wanting all of the intervention communities to develop and implement effective strategies, and the same number and proportion strongly agreed to learning whether the approach was effective in all of the intervention communities). Interestingly, a somewhat larger number—seven out of ten—strongly agreed that the study was important to them because it will make an important contribution to knowledge on the impact of such approaches more generally (i.e., not limited to the intervention communities participating in this study). Half of the respondents indicated that being part of a national research study was important to her or him, and half indicated it was important for their community.