Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, S113-750 Bannatyne Ave, Winnipeg, MB, R3E 0W, Canada.
Faculty of Education, University of Manitoba, 71 Curry Pl, Winnipeg, MB, R3T 2N2, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2024 Jan 4;24(1):13. doi: 10.1186/s12913-023-10512-9.
Despite growing evidence of the potential of arts-based modalities to translate knowledge and spark discussion on complex issues, applications to health policy are rare. This study explored the potential of a research-based theatrical video to increase public capacity and motivation to engage with the complex issues that make Emergency Department wait times such an intractable problem.
Larry Saves the Canadian Healthcare System is a digital musical micro-series developed from extensive research examining system-level causes of Emergency crowding and the ineffectiveness of prevailing approaches. We released individual episodes and a revised full-length version on YouTube, using organic promotion strategies and paid advertising. We used YouTube Analytics to track views, engagement and viewer demographics, and content-analyzed viewer comments. We also conducted five university-based screenings; 92 students completed questionnaires, rating Larry on 16 descriptors using a 7-point Likert scale.
From June 2022 through May 2023, Larry garnered over 100,000 views (76,752 of the full-length version, 35,535 of episodes), 1329 likes, 2780 shares, and 139 comments. Views and watch time were higher among women and positively associated with age. Among YouTube comments, the predominating themes were praise for the video and criticism of the healthcare system. Many commenters applauded the show's accuracy, humor, and/or resonance with their experience; several shared healthcare horror stories. Students overwhelmingly agreed with all positive and disagreed with all negative descriptors, and nearly unanimously deemed the video informative, thought-provoking, and entertaining. Most also affirmed that it had increased their knowledge, interest, and confidence to participate in discussions about healthcare issues. Neither gender, primary language, nor employment in healthcare predicted ratings, but graduate students and those 25+ years old evaluated the video most positively.
These findings highlight the promise of research-informed musical satire to inform and invigorate discourse on an urgent health policy problem. Larry has reached tens of thousands of viewers, garnered excellent feedback, and received high student ratings. Further research should directly assess educational and behavioural outcomes and explore what facilitative strategies could maximize this knowledge translation product's potential to foster informed, impactful policy dialogue.
尽管有越来越多的证据表明,艺术形式有潜力将知识转化,并引发人们对复杂问题的讨论,但将其应用于卫生政策的情况却很少见。本研究探讨了基于研究的戏剧视频的潜力,以提高公众能力并激发他们参与解决导致急诊等候时间成为棘手问题的复杂问题的动机。
《拉里拯救加拿大医疗保健系统》是一部数字音乐微剧,由广泛的研究发展而来,研究内容涉及急诊人群拥挤的系统层面原因以及现有方法的无效性。我们在 YouTube 上发布了各个剧集和修订后的全长版本,使用了有机推广策略和付费广告。我们使用 YouTube 分析来跟踪浏览量、参与度和观众特征,并对观众评论进行内容分析。我们还在五所大学进行了五次放映;92 名学生完成了问卷调查,使用 7 点李克特量表对拉里的 16 个描述符进行了评分。
从 2022 年 6 月到 2023 年 5 月,《拉里》获得了超过 10 万次浏览量(全长版本 76752 次,剧集 35535 次)、1329 个赞、2780 次分享和 139 条评论。女性的浏览量和观看时间更高,且与年龄呈正相关。在 YouTube 评论中,主要的主题是对视频和医疗保健系统的赞扬。许多评论者称赞该节目的准确性、幽默感和/或与他们的经历产生共鸣;一些人分享了医疗保健方面的恐怖故事。学生们几乎一致地对所有积极的评价表示赞同,对所有消极的评价表示反对,并且一致认为该视频信息丰富、发人深省且有趣。大多数人还肯定地表示,它增加了他们对参与医疗保健问题讨论的知识、兴趣和信心。性别、主要语言或是否从事医疗保健工作都不能预测评分,但研究生和 25 岁以上的人对该视频的评价最高。
这些发现突出了以研究为基础的音乐讽刺作品在告知和激发人们对紧迫的卫生政策问题的讨论方面的潜力。《拉里》已经吸引了成千上万的观众,获得了极好的反馈,并获得了学生的高分评价。进一步的研究应该直接评估教育和行为结果,并探讨哪些促进策略可以最大限度地发挥这一知识转化产品的潜力,以促进知情、有影响力的政策对话。