Murray Jennifer, Williams Brian, Hoskins Gaylor, Skar Silje, McGhee John, Treweek Shaun, Sniehotta Falko F, Sheikh Aziz, Brown Gordon, Hagen Suzanne, Cameron Linda, Jones Claire, Gauld Dylan
Edinburgh Napier University, Sighthill Campus, Sighthill Court, Edinburgh, EH11 4BN UK.
Nursing, Midwifery and Allied Health Professions Research Unit, Unit 13 Scion House, Stirling Innovation Park, Stirling, FK9 4NF Scotland.
Pilot Feasibility Stud. 2016 Aug 15;2:46. doi: 10.1186/s40814-016-0091-x. eCollection 2016.
Visualisation techniques are used in a range of healthcare interventions. However, these frequently lack a coherent rationale or clear theoretical basis. This lack of definition and explicit targeting of the underlying mechanisms may impede the success of and evaluation of the intervention. We describe the theoretical development, deployment, and pilot evaluation, of a complex visually mediated behavioural intervention. The exemplar intervention focused on increasing physical activity among young people with asthma. We employed an explicit five-stage development model, which was actively supported by a consultative user group. The developmental stages involved establishing the theoretical basis, establishing a narrative structure, visual rendering, checking interpretation, and pilot testing. We conducted in-depth interviews and focus groups during early development and checking, followed by an online experiment for pilot testing. A total of 91 individuals, including young people with asthma, parents, teachers, and health professionals, were involved in development and testing.
Our final intervention consisted of two components: (1) an interactive 3D computer animation to create intentions and (2) an action plan and volitional help sheet to promote the translation of intentions to behaviour. Theory was mediated throughout by visual and audio forms. The intervention was regarded as highly acceptable, engaging, and meaningful by all stakeholders. The perceived impact on asthma understanding and intentions was reported positively, with most individuals saying that the 3D computer animation had either clarified a range of issues or made them more real. Our five-stage model underpinned by extensive consultation worked well and is presented as a framework to support explicit decision-making for others developing theory informed visually mediated interventions.
We have demonstrated the ability to develop theory-based visually mediated behavioural interventions. However, attention needs to be paid to the potential ambiguity associated with images and thus the concept of visual literacy among patients. Our revised model may be helpful as a guide to aid development, acceptability, and ultimately effectiveness.
可视化技术被应用于一系列医疗保健干预措施中。然而,这些技术常常缺乏连贯的基本原理或明确的理论基础。对潜在机制缺乏明确的定义和针对性可能会阻碍干预措施的成功实施和评估。我们描述了一种复杂的视觉介导行为干预措施的理论发展、应用和初步评估。该范例干预措施的重点是增加哮喘青少年的身体活动。我们采用了一个明确的五阶段发展模型,该模型得到了一个咨询用户群体的积极支持。发展阶段包括建立理论基础、构建叙事结构、视觉呈现、检查解读以及试点测试。在早期发展和检查阶段,我们进行了深入访谈和焦点小组讨论,随后进行了在线实验以进行试点测试。共有91人参与了开发和测试,其中包括哮喘青少年、家长、教师和健康专业人员。
我们最终的干预措施包括两个部分:(1)一个交互式3D计算机动画以激发意愿,(2)一个行动计划和意志帮助表以促进意愿向行为的转化。理论在整个过程中通过视觉和音频形式进行传递。所有利益相关者都认为该干预措施非常可接受、引人入胜且有意义。据积极反馈,该措施对哮喘理解和意愿产生了影响,大多数人表示3D计算机动画要么澄清了一系列问题,要么使其更加真实。我们在广泛咨询基础上建立的五阶段模型运行良好,并作为一个框架呈现出来,以支持其他开发基于理论的视觉介导干预措施的人进行明确的决策。
我们已经证明了开发基于理论的视觉介导行为干预措施的能力。然而,需要注意与图像相关的潜在模糊性以及患者的视觉素养概念。我们修订后的模型可能有助于指导开发、提高可接受性,并最终提高有效性。