Centre for Evidence Based Intervention, Department of Social Policy and Intervention, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland.
BMC Public Health. 2023 Sep 4;23(1):1708. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-16649-w.
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a serious public health issue which experienced a sharp incline during the onset of COVID-19. Increases in other forms of violence, such as violence against children (VAC), have also been linked to the pandemic, and there have been calls for greater prevention efforts that tackle both forms of violence concurrently. The COVID-19 crisis has highlighted the urgent need for evidence-based and scalable violence prevention interventions that target multiple forms of family violence. Parenting programmes have shown promising results in preventing various forms of family violence, including IPV and VAC, and have recently experienced an expansion in delivery, with digital intervention formats growing. This paper describes the development and evaluation of the IPV prevention content designed and integrated into ParentText, a chatbot parenting intervention adapted from Parenting for Lifelong Health programmes.
The ParentText IPV prevention content was developed using the Six Steps in Quality Intervention Development (6SQuID) framework. This involved targeted literature searches for key studies to identify causal factors associated with IPV and determining those with greatest scope for change. Findings were used to develop the intervention content and theory of change. Consultations were held with academic researchers (n = 5), practitioners (n = 5), and local community organisations (n = 7), who reviewed the content. A formative evaluation was conducted with parents in relationships (n = 96) in Jamaica to better understand patterns in user engagement with the intervention and identify strategies to further improve engagement.
Using the 6SQuID model, five topics on IPV prevention were integrated into the ParentText chatbot. Text-messages covering each topic, including additional materials such as cartoons and videos, were also developed. The formative evaluation revealed an average user-engagement length of 14 days, 0.50 chatbot interactions per day, and over half of participants selected to view additional relationship content.
This article provides a unique contribution as the first to integrate IPV prevention content into a remotely delivered, digital parenting intervention for low-resource settings. The findings from this research and formative evaluation shed light on the promising potential of chatbots as scalable and accessible forms of violence prevention, targeting multiple types of family violence.
亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)是一个严重的公共卫生问题,在 COVID-19 爆发期间急剧上升。其他形式的暴力,如针对儿童的暴力(VAC)也与大流行有关,因此有人呼吁加大预防力度,同时解决这两种形式的暴力。COVID-19 危机突显了迫切需要针对多种形式的家庭暴力提供基于证据和可扩展的预防干预措施。育儿方案已显示出预防各种形式的家庭暴力,包括 IPV 和 VAC 的有希望的结果,并且最近在交付方面有所扩大,数字干预形式不断增加。本文描述了为 ParentText 设计和整合 IPV 预防内容的开发和评估,ParentText 是从终生健康育儿计划改编而来的聊天机器人育儿干预措施。
使用 6SQuID 框架(六步质量干预开发)来开发 ParentText 的 IPV 预防内容。这包括有针对性的文献搜索,以确定与 IPV 相关的关键研究,并确定具有最大改变范围的因素。研究结果用于制定干预内容和变革理论。与学术研究人员(n=5)、从业人员(n=5)和当地社区组织(n=7)进行了磋商,他们审查了内容。在牙买加与处于关系中的父母(n=96)进行了形成性评估,以更好地了解用户对干预措施的参与模式,并确定进一步提高参与度的策略。
使用 6SQuID 模型,将五个 IPV 预防主题整合到 ParentText 聊天机器人中。还开发了涵盖每个主题的文本信息,包括漫画和视频等其他材料。形成性评估显示用户参与度平均为 14 天,每天与聊天机器人交互 0.50 次,超过一半的参与者选择查看其他关系内容。
本文的独特贡献在于,首次将 IPV 预防内容整合到针对资源匮乏环境的远程提供的数字育儿干预措施中。这项研究和形成性评估的结果揭示了聊天机器人作为针对多种类型家庭暴力的可扩展和可及的预防形式的巨大潜力。