Adam Maya, Chase Rachel P, McMahon Shannon A, Kuhnert Kira-Leigh, Johnston Jamie, Ward Victoria, Prober Charles, Bärnighausen Till
Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA.
Independent Researcher, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2021 Jun 25;21(1):1223. doi: 10.1186/s12889-021-11043-w.
Designing health communication interventions for global scaling promotes health literacy and facilitates rapid global health messaging. Limited literature explores preferences for animation prototypes and other content characteristics across participants in different global regions. Prior research underscores an urgent need for health communication interventions that are compelling and accessible across culturally and geographically diverse audiences. This study presents feedback from global learners on animation design preferences and other key considerations for the development of educational video content intended for global adaptation and scaling.
We used a mixed-methods, sequential explanatory design, with a qualitative descriptive approach to the analysis of the qualitative data. We recruited participants from an international group of learners enrolled in a massive open online course. Through an online quantitative survey (n = 330), we sought preferences from participants in 73 countries for animation design prototypes to be used in video-based health communication interventions. To learn more about these preferences, we conducted in-depth interviews (n = 20) with participants selected using maximum variation purposive sampling.
Generally, respondents were willing to accept animation prototypes that were free of cultural and ethnic identifiers and believed these to be preferable for globally scalable health communication videos. Diverse representations of age, gender roles, and family structure were also preferred and felt to support inclusive messaging across cultures and global regions. Familiar-sounding voiceovers using local languages, dialects, and accents were preferred for enhancing local resonance. Across global regions, narratives were highlighted as a compelling approach to facilitating engagement and participants preferred short videos with no more than two or three health messages.
Our findings suggest that global learners may be willing to accept simplified visuals, designed for broad cross-cultural acceptability, especially if the content is localized in other ways, such as through the use of locally resonating narratives and voiceovers. Diverse, inclusive portrayals of age, gender roles and family structure were preferred.
设计用于全球推广的健康传播干预措施可提高健康素养,并促进全球健康信息的快速传播。现有文献较少探讨不同全球区域参与者对动画原型及其他内容特征的偏好。先前的研究强调,迫切需要开发具有吸引力且能被不同文化和地域受众接受的健康传播干预措施。本研究展示了全球学习者对动画设计偏好的反馈,以及对旨在进行全球改编和推广的教育视频内容开发的其他关键考量。
我们采用了混合方法、序列解释性设计,并采用定性描述方法分析定性数据。我们从参加大规模开放在线课程的国际学习者群体中招募参与者。通过在线定量调查(n = 330),我们征求了来自73个国家的参与者对用于基于视频的健康传播干预措施的动画设计原型的偏好。为了更深入了解这些偏好,我们对采用最大差异目的抽样法选出的参与者进行了深入访谈(n = 20)。
总体而言,受访者愿意接受不含文化和种族标识的动画原型,并认为这些原型更适合用于全球推广的健康传播视频。年龄、性别角色和家庭结构的多样化呈现也受到青睐,并被认为有助于跨文化和全球区域传递包容性信息。使用当地语言、方言和口音且听起来熟悉的旁白更受青睐,有助于增强本地共鸣。在全球各区域,叙事被视为促进参与的一种有吸引力的方式,参与者更喜欢包含不超过两三条健康信息的短视频。
我们的研究结果表明,全球学习者可能愿意接受为实现广泛的跨文化可接受性而设计的简化视觉效果,特别是如果内容通过其他方式进行了本地化处理,例如使用具有本地共鸣的叙事和旁白。年龄、性别角色和家庭结构的多样化、包容性呈现更受青睐。