Abstract

BackgroundAlthough it is well established that family-centered education is critical to managing childhood asthma, the information needs of parents of children with asthma are not being met through current educational approaches. Patient-driven educational materials that leverage the power of the storytelling and the arts show promise in communicating health information and assisting in illness self-management. However, such arts-based knowledge translation approaches are in their infancy, and little is known about how to develop such tools for parents. This paper reports on the development of “My Asthma Diary” – an innovative knowledge translation tool based on rigorous research evidence and tailored to parents’ asthma-related information needs.MethodsWe used a multi-stage process to develop four eBook prototypes of “My Asthma Diary.” We conducted formative research on parents’ information needs and identified high quality research evidence on childhood asthma, and used these data to inform the development of the asthma eBooks. We established interdisciplinary consulting teams with health researchers, practitioners, and artists to help iteratively create the knowledge translation tools.ResultsWe describe the iterative, transdisciplinary process of developing asthma eBooks which incorporates: (I) parents’ preferences and information needs on childhood asthma, (II) quality evidence on childhood asthma and its management, and (III) the engaging and informative powers of storytelling and visual art as methods to communicate complex health information to parents. We identified four dominant methodological and procedural challenges encountered during this process: (I) working within an inter-disciplinary team, (II) quantity and ordering of information, (III) creating a composite narrative, and (IV) balancing actual and ideal management scenarios.ConclusionsWe describe a replicable and rigorous multi-staged approach to developing a patient-driven, creative knowledge translation tool, which can be adapted for use with different populations and contexts. We identified specific procedural and methodological challenges that others conducting comparable work should consider, particularly as creative, patient-driven knowledge translation strategies continue to emerge across health disciplines.

Highlights

  • It is well established that family-centered education is critical to managing childhood asthma, the information needs of parents of children with asthma are not being met through current educational approaches

  • Few examples of how to create arts-based knowledge translation (KT) strategies exist in the literature [11]. We address this gap by offering an account of how a visual art and story-based KT tool for parents of children with asthma was developed, while highlighting challenges encountered during this process

  • We developed this tool for parents of children with asthma, we believe our process can serve as a guide for others conducting similar work with different populations, including those interested in science communication (i.e., SciComm) more generally

Read more

Summary

Introduction

It is well established that family-centered education is critical to managing childhood asthma, the information needs of parents of children with asthma are not being met through current educational approaches. Patient-driven educational materials that leverage the power of the storytelling and the arts show promise in communicating health information and assisting in illness self-management. Such arts-based knowledge translation approaches are in their infancy, and little is known about how to develop such tools for parents. The paradoxical existence of high quality research evidence about asthma and continued deficiencies in parental knowledge, self-efficacy and suboptimal at-home asthma management is a knowledge translation (KT) problem. KT strategies targeting the wide-range of stakeholders (e.g., parents, non-health care professionals) are necessary, in light of the growing emphasis on patient-centeredness, shared-decision-making, and community-based health management of chronic illnesses, including childhood asthma

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call