Children's Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
Department of Preventive Dental Science, Dr Gerald Niznick College of Dentistry, Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
JDR Clin Trans Res. 2023 Oct;8(4):326-336. doi: 10.1177/23800844221117143. Epub 2022 Aug 9.
To develop oral health-related digital story videos through interviews with Indigenous parents who shared their experiences in dealing with early childhood caries (ECC) in their children.
Indigenous parents in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, were recruited from community programs from October to December 2019 as part of the Nishtam Niwiipitan (My First Teeth), a community-based participatory research study that builds on an ECC intervention. A twofold qualitative narrative approach to data collection was used: 1) interviewing participants and creating digital stories and 2) taking part in the postfilming feedback interviews. Participants were interviewed via video in a semistructured format sharing their experiences and attitudes about caring for children with ECC and the challenges faced seeking dental care for the disease. The stories were drawn from parents in 3 predetermined groups: those with 1) children who had undergone dental surgery under general anesthesia, 2) children who had received silver diamine fluoride as an alternative to surgery to manage ECC, and 3) caries-free children. Prior to editing, the narrated stories were transcribed verbatim and analyzed thematically. The postfilming interview transcripts were also analyzed and coded for key themes.
Six parents and 1 grandparent, all of whom self-identified as Indigenous (First Nations or Métis) and cared for children aged <6 y, created the digital stories. Three key themes emerged from the postfilming interviews: ability to share, ability to help, and ability to change. Participants felt important, optimistic, and motivated throughout the process of making their digital stories.
Digital storytelling offered First Nations and Métis parents a unique opportunity to share their experiences caring for children with ECC with the wider public. These videos can be incorporated into oral health promotion and ECC intervention programs as a culturally appropriate method for reaching Indigenous families.
The use and development of digital storytelling for oral health promotion have great potential for spreading awareness and sharing knowledge with Indigenous parents/caregivers about their children's oral health and care practices. This health promotion tool is congruent with Indigenous ways of knowing, as Indigenous communities have a long tradition of oral history. The videos produced for this study will assist with oral health promotion efforts to address the high rates of early childhood caries in Indigenous communities in Canada.
通过采访分享在儿童早期龋(ECC)方面经验的土著家长,制作与口腔健康相关的数字故事视频。
2019 年 10 月至 12 月,在加拿大马尼托巴省温尼伯市,从社区项目中招募土著家长参与以社区为基础的参与式研究项目“Nishtam Niwiipitan(我的第一颗牙齿)”,该项目是对 ECC 干预措施的补充。采用双重定性叙事方法收集数据:1)对参与者进行采访并创作数字故事,2)参与影片后反馈访谈。以半结构化格式通过视频采访参与者,分享他们对照顾患有 ECC 儿童的经验和态度,以及在寻求治疗该疾病的牙科护理方面面临的挑战。这些故事来自于预先确定的 3 组父母:1)其子女接受过全身麻醉下牙科手术的父母,2)接受过银胺氟化物治疗以替代手术来管理 ECC 的父母,3)子女无龋的父母。在编辑之前,逐字记录讲述的故事,并进行主题分析。影片后访谈的记录也进行了分析和编码,以确定主要主题。
6 位父母和 1 位祖父母,均自我认定为土著(第一民族或梅蒂斯人)并照顾年龄<6 岁的儿童,创作了数字故事。影片后访谈出现了 3 个关键主题:分享能力、帮助能力和改变能力。参与者在制作数字故事的整个过程中感到重要、乐观和受到激励。
数字故事为第一民族和梅蒂斯父母提供了一个独特的机会,与更广泛的公众分享他们照顾患有 ECC 儿童的经验。这些视频可以作为一种文化上适宜的方法纳入口腔健康促进和 ECC 干预计划,以覆盖土著家庭。
数字故事在口腔健康促进方面的应用和发展具有很大的潜力,可以提高土著家长/照顾者对其子女口腔健康和护理实践的认识和知识共享。这种健康促进工具与土著的认知方式一致,因为土著社区有着悠久的口头历史传统。本研究制作的视频将有助于开展口腔健康促进工作,以解决加拿大土著社区中高发病率的儿童早期龋。