Educating vulnerable communities about diabetes: Can a fotonovela work?

IF 1.1 4区 医学 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Health Education Journal Pub Date : 2024-03-12 DOI:10.1177/00178969241236595
Burt Davis, Carel Jansen
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Abstract

Objectives:This study evaluated the effects of reading different versions of a fotonovela about diabetes in resource-poor settings in South Africa.Design:An experimental study was conducted with 411 participants, comparing a fotonovela with a younger protagonist, a similar fotonovela version with an older protagonist and a no message control condition. Differences between the two fotonovela versions were analysed for two age groups of readers (25–49 years, and 50 years and older).Setting:Community centres in vulnerable communities in the South African provinces of the Western Cape, the Northern Cape and Gauteng.Method:In the experimental conditions, participants completed a questionnaire after reading one of the fotonovela versions. Participants in the control condition answered similar questions without having read a fotonovela.Results:Both fotonovela versions resulted in more diabetes knowledge than the control condition. Limited positive effects were found for attitudes and behavioural intentions. In the younger participant group, age similarity between the protagonist and readers resulted in knowledge gain, while in the older participant group, no such effect was found. In both age groups, no age similarity effects were found for attitudes or behavioural intentions.Conclusion:This study confirms that fotonovelas can be an effective means of health communication. Furthermore, for a narrative on a health topic for which age is relevant, it can be beneficial to choose a young protagonist. For readers from the same age group, the impact of the story on knowledge acquisition may then be greatest, while for older readers, the age of the protagonist does not seem to influence the knowledge effects of the story.
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对弱势群体进行糖尿病教育:家庭伦理剧能否奏效?
目的:本研究评估了在南非资源匮乏的环境中阅读不同版本的糖尿病科普读物的效果。设计:本研究对 411 名参与者进行了一项实验研究,比较了主角较年轻的科普读物、主角较年长的类似版本科普读物以及无信息对照条件。地点:南非西开普省、北开普省和豪登省弱势社区的社区中心。方法:在实验条件下,参与者在阅读完其中一个版本的家庭小说后填写一份问卷。结果:与对照组相比,两种版本的家庭小说都能使受试者获得更多的糖尿病知识。对态度和行为意向的积极影响有限。在年龄较小的参与者组中,主人公和读者之间的年龄相似性导致了知识的增加,而在年龄较大的参与者组中,则没有发现这种效应。结论:本研究证实,图解小说可以作为一种有效的健康传播手段。此外,对于与年龄相关的健康主题叙事,选择年轻的主人公也是有益的。对于同一年龄段的读者来说,故事对知识获取的影响可能最大,而对于年龄较大的读者来说,主人公的年龄似乎并不影响故事对知识的影响。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
65
期刊介绍: Health Education Journal is a leading peer reviewed journal established in 1943. It carries original papers on health promotion and education research, policy development and good practice.
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