Escobar-Viera César G, Melcher Eleanna M, Miller Rebekah S, Whitfield Darren L, Jacobson-López Daniel, Gordon Jacob D, Ballard Adrian J, Rollman Bruce L, Pagoto Sherry
Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, United States of America.
School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States of America.
Internet Interv. 2021 Jul 7;25:100428. doi: 10.1016/j.invent.2021.100428. eCollection 2021 Sep.
Sexual and gender minority (SGM) persons face a number of physical and mental health disparities closely linked to discrimination, social stigma, and victimization. Despite the acceptability and increasing number of digital health interventions focused on improving health outcomes among SGM people, there is a lack of reviews summarizing whether and how researchers assess engagement with social media-delivered health interventions for this group.
The objective of this systematic review was to synthesize and critique the evidence on evaluation of engagement with social media-delivered interventions for improving health outcomes among SGM persons.
We conducted a literature search for studies published between January 2003 and June 2020 using 4 electronic databases. Articles were included if they were peer-reviewed, in English language, assessed engagement with a social media-delivered health intervention for improving health outcomes among sexual and gender minorities. A minimum of two authors independently extracted data from each study using an a priori developed abstraction form. We assessed quality of data reporting using the CONSORT extension for pilot and feasibility studies and CONSORT statement parallel group randomized trials.
We included 18 articles in the review; 15 were feasibility studies and 3 were efficacy or effectiveness randomized trials. The quality of data reporting varied considerably. The vast majority of articles focused on improving HIV-related outcomes among men who have sex with men. Only three studies recruited cisgender women and/or transgender persons. We found heterogeneity in how engagement was defined and assessed. Intervention usage from social media data was the most frequently used engagement measure.
In addition to the heterogeneity in defining and assessing engagement, we found that the focus of assessment was often on measures of intervention usage only. More purposeful recruitment is needed to learn about whether, how, and why different SGM groups engage with social media-interventions. This leaves significant room for future research to expand evaluation criteria for cognitive and emotional aspects of intervention engagement in order to develop effective and tailored social media-delivered interventions for SGM people. Our findings also support the need for developing and testing social media-delivered interventions that focus on improving mental health and outcomes related to chronic health conditions among SGM persons.
性取向和性别少数群体(SGM)面临许多与歧视、社会耻辱和受害相关的身心健康差异。尽管以改善SGM群体健康结果为重点的数字健康干预措施具有可接受性且数量不断增加,但缺乏综述来总结研究人员是否以及如何评估该群体对社交媒体提供的健康干预措施的参与度。
本系统综述的目的是综合和批判关于评估社交媒体提供的干预措施以改善SGM群体健康结果的参与度的证据。
我们使用4个电子数据库对2003年1月至2020年6月发表的研究进行了文献检索。如果文章经过同行评审、为英文、评估了对社交媒体提供的旨在改善性取向和性别少数群体健康结果的健康干预措施的参与度,则纳入研究。至少两名作者使用预先制定的摘要表格独立从每项研究中提取数据。我们使用CONSORT扩展用于试点和可行性研究以及CONSORT声明平行组随机试验来评估数据报告的质量。
我们在综述中纳入了18篇文章;15篇为可行性研究,3篇为疗效或有效性随机试验。数据报告的质量差异很大。绝大多数文章关注改善男男性行为者的艾滋病毒相关结果。只有三项研究招募了顺性别女性和/或跨性别者。我们发现参与度的定义和评估方式存在异质性。来自社交媒体数据的干预措施使用情况是最常用的参与度衡量指标。
除了在定义和评估参与度方面存在异质性外,我们还发现评估重点通常仅在于干预措施使用情况的衡量指标。需要更有针对性地招募研究对象,以了解不同的SGM群体是否、如何以及为何参与社交媒体干预措施。这为未来研究留下了很大空间,以便扩展对干预措施参与度的认知和情感方面的评估标准,从而为SGM群体开发有效且量身定制的社交媒体提供的干预措施。我们的研究结果还支持开展和测试专注于改善SGM群体心理健康和与慢性健康状况相关结果的社交媒体提供的干预措施的必要性。