The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, USA.
South Dakota State University, Brookings, SD, USA.
Health Promot Pract. 2021 Nov;22(6):786-795. doi: 10.1177/1524839920974580. Epub 2020 Dec 2.
In this article, the authors discuss a community-based participatory research (CBPR)-driven and culturally tailored social media campaign to promote living kidney donation and transplantation (LKDT) serving Native American communities, who are disproportionately burdened by kidney failure. The effort represents a collaboration among researchers, tribal leaders and community members, medical centers, and other stakeholders to facilitate health promotion related to LKDT among the broader Native American community. Campaign objectives were collaboratively established by the researchers and stakeholders, and the campaign approach and materials were likewise developed in consultation with the community. The results indicated that the use of success stories about LKDT within campaign materials was a statistically significant predictors of heightened campaign engagement (p = .003, β = .223). Recommendations are offered for partnering with tribal communities and other stakeholders, as well as for building tailored health promotion strategies.
本文讨论了一项以社区为基础的参与式研究(CBPR)驱动并进行文化调整的社交媒体宣传活动,旨在促进为服务原住民社区的活体肾脏捐赠和移植(LKDT),因为原住民社区的肾衰竭负担不成比例地沉重。这项工作代表了研究人员、部落领袖和社区成员、医疗中心和其他利益相关者之间的合作,旨在促进更广泛的原住民社区与 LKDT 相关的健康促进。宣传活动的目标是由研究人员和利益相关者共同确定的,宣传活动的方法和材料也是在与社区协商的基础上制定的。结果表明,宣传材料中使用关于 LKDT 的成功故事是提高宣传活动参与度的一个具有统计学意义的预测指标(p =.003,β =.223)。本文还为与部落社区和其他利益相关者合作以及制定有针对性的健康促进策略提供了建议。