Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, 722 W 168th Street, New York, NY, 10032, USA.
Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center, 1130 St Nicholas Avenue, New York, NY, 10032, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2021 Oct 7;21(1):1805. doi: 10.1186/s12889-021-11775-9.
Physical activity is central to chronic disease prevention. Low resource mothers face structural barriers preventing them from increasing their physical activity to reduce their chronic disease risk. We co-designed an intervention, with the ultimate goal of building social cohesion through social media to increase physical activity for low resourced mothers in urban settings.
In 2019, we interviewed 10 mothers of children (< 12 years) living in Washington Heights, Manhattan. The interviews were transcribed and coded for themes that guided the creation of a co-design workshop. Washington Heights-based mothers (n = 16) attended a co-design workshop to generate the blueprint for the Free Time for Wellness intervention.
Mothers in our sample had limited time, external support and resources, which hindered them from increasing their physical activity; we learned that in addition to physical health, mental health was a concern for participants. Participants had varying degrees of self-efficacy and trust in social media. Bringing mothers and researchers together in a co-design workshop, we identified types of physical activities they would enjoy participating in, the ideal time to do so, the kind of childcare they needed, and their preferences for communication with the community champion. The interviews and workshop highlighted the need for a community space that mothers and children could co-occupy. The intervention was designed to be 3 months' worth of sample programming with one activity per week, rotating between dance, yoga, food pantry visits and group playdates. Participants were invited to bring their children to a space with one room for the 'participants only' activity and a second room in which professional childcare providers supervised the children.
Through this two-phased co-design process, we created an intervention with mothers in an urban community with the goal of using social media to bring them together for wellness, primarily through increased physical activity. Despite the co-design of this intervention with a specific community, there are some universal applications of our findings, and of the use of co-design workshops, to other settings.
身体活动是慢性病预防的核心。资源匮乏的母亲面临着结构性障碍,使她们无法增加身体活动,从而降低患慢性病的风险。我们共同设计了一项干预措施,最终目标是通过社交媒体建立社会凝聚力,以增加城市环境中资源匮乏母亲的身体活动。
2019 年,我们采访了 10 位居住在曼哈顿华盛顿高地的 12 岁以下儿童的母亲。采访内容被转录并进行了主题编码,这些主题为共同设计研讨会的开展提供了指导。16 位来自华盛顿高地的母亲参加了共同设计研讨会,为“自由时间促进健康”干预措施制定了蓝图。
我们研究样本中的母亲时间有限,缺乏外部支持和资源,这阻碍了她们增加身体活动;我们了解到,除了身体健康,参与者还关注心理健康。参与者对社交媒体的自我效能感和信任程度各不相同。通过将母亲和研究人员聚集在一个共同设计研讨会上,我们确定了她们愿意参与的身体活动类型、理想的活动时间、所需的儿童保育类型,以及她们与社区倡导者沟通的偏好。访谈和研讨会强调了需要一个母亲和孩子可以共同使用的社区空间。该干预措施设计为为期 3 个月的样本编程,每周进行一项活动,轮流进行舞蹈、瑜伽、食品储藏室参观和集体游戏约会。参与者被邀请带着孩子前往一个空间,一个房间用于“仅限参与者”的活动,另一个房间由专业儿童保育员监督孩子。
通过这个两阶段的共同设计过程,我们为一个城市社区的母亲设计了一项干预措施,目的是通过增加身体活动,主要通过社交媒体将她们聚集在一起促进健康。尽管这项干预措施是与特定社区共同设计的,但我们的研究结果和使用共同设计研讨会的方法在其他环境中具有一些普遍的应用。