NIA-Layton Aging and Alzheimer's Disease Center, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland.
Oregon Center for Aging and Technology, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland.
Gerontologist. 2019 Jan 9;59(1):147-157. doi: 10.1093/geront/gny069.
Multimodal interventions are increasingly targeting multiple cognitive decline risk factors. However, technology remains mostly adjunctive, largely prioritizes age relevancy over cultural relevancy, and often targets individual health without lasting, community-wide deliverables. Meanwhile, African Americans remain overburdened by cognitive risk factors yet underrepresented in cognitive health and technology studies. The Sharing History through Active Reminiscence and Photo-imagery (SHARP) program increases physical, social, and cognitive activity within a culturally meaningful context that produces community deliverables-an oral history archive and cognitive health education.
The SHARP application was tested with 19 African Americans ≥55 years, aiming for an easy, integrative, and culturally meaningful experience. The application guided triads in walks 3 times weekly for 6 months in Portland, Oregon's historically Black neighborhoods; local historical images prompted recorded conversational reminiscence. Focus groups evaluated factors influencing technology acceptance-attitudes about technology, usefulness, usability, and relevance to integrating program goals. Thematic analysis guided qualitative interpretation.
Technology acceptance was influenced by group learning, paper-copy replicas for reluctant users, ease of navigation, usefulness for integrating and engaging in health behaviors, relevance to integrating individual benefit and the community priority of preserving history amidst gentrification, and flexibility in how the community uses deliverables. Perceived community benefits sustained acceptance despite intermittent technology failure.
We offer applicable considerations for brain health technology design, implementation, and deliverables that integrate modalities, age, and cultural relevance, and individual and community benefit for more meaningful, and thus more motivated community engagement.
多模式干预措施越来越多地针对多个认知衰退风险因素。然而,技术仍然主要是辅助性的,主要侧重于年龄相关性而不是文化相关性,并且通常针对个体健康,而没有持久的、面向整个社区的可交付成果。与此同时,非裔美国人仍然面临认知风险因素的负担过重,但在认知健康和技术研究中代表性不足。通过积极回忆和照片意象进行分享历史(SHARP)计划在具有文化意义的背景下增加身体、社会和认知活动,从而产生社区可交付成果——口述历史档案和认知健康教育。
SHARP 应用程序在 19 名年龄在 55 岁及以上的非裔美国人中进行了测试,旨在实现简单、综合和具有文化意义的体验。该应用程序指导三人组在俄勒冈州波特兰市的历史上黑人社区每周进行 3 次散步,为期 6 个月;当地的历史图像提示记录下对话回忆。焦点小组评估了影响技术接受度的因素——对技术的态度、有用性、可用性以及与整合项目目标的相关性。主题分析指导了定性解释。
技术接受度受到小组学习、为不愿意使用技术的用户提供纸质副本、导航方便、有助于整合和参与健康行为、与整合个人利益和社区保护历史免受城市化影响的相关性以及社区使用交付成果的灵活性的影响。尽管存在间歇性技术故障,但感知到的社区利益仍然维持了接受度。
我们为脑健康技术的设计、实施和交付提供了适用的考虑因素,这些因素整合了模式、年龄和文化相关性,以及个人和社区利益,以实现更有意义、从而更能激发社区参与的技术。