Global and Tropical Health Division, Menzies School of Health Research, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, NT, Australia.
Department of Infectious Diseases, Royal Darwin and Palmerston Hospitals, Northern Territory Health, Darwin, NT, Australia.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2024 Jun 7;24(1):710. doi: 10.1186/s12913-024-11149-y.
Hepatitis B is endemic amongst the Australian Aboriginal population in the Northern Territory. A participatory action research project identified the lack of culturally appropriate education tools and led to the development of the "Hep B Story" app in the Aboriginal language Yolŋu Matha. This paper describes a formal evaluation of the app's first version, which informed improvements and translation into a further ten Aboriginal languages.
The evaluation employed Participatory Action Research (PAR) principles to work within Indigenous research methodologies and prioritise Indigenous knowledge to improve the app iteratively. Semi-structured interviews and focus groups were conducted across the Northern Territory with 11 different language groups. Local Community Based Researchers and Aboriginal Research team members coordinated sessions. The recorded, translated conversations were transcribed verbatim and thematically analysed using an inductive and deductive approach.
Between November 2018 and September 2020, 94 individuals from 11 language groups participated in 25 semi-structured interviews and 10 focus groups. All participants identified as Aboriginal. Most participants felt the app would be culturally appropriate for Aboriginal communities in the Northern Territory and improve knowledge surrounding hepatitis B. The information gathered from these interviews allowed for identifying five main themes: support for app, relationships, concept versus language, shame, and perceptions of images, along with errors that required modification.
A "real-life" evaluation of the app was comprehensively completed using a PAR approach blended with Indigenous research methods. This evaluation allowed us to develop an updated and enhanced version of the app before creating the additional ten language versions. An iterative approach alongside strong community engagement was pivotal in ensuring the app's cultural safety and appropriateness. We recommend avoiding the use of knowledge-based evaluations in an Aboriginal setting to ensure relevant and culturally appropriate feedback is obtained.
乙型肝炎在北领地的澳大利亚原住民中流行。一个参与式行动研究项目发现缺乏文化上适当的教育工具,并导致在原住民语言约鲁巴马塔(Yolŋu Matha)中开发了“乙型肝炎故事”应用程序。本文描述了对该应用程序的第一个版本的正式评估,该评估为改进该应用程序并将其翻译成另外十种原住民语言提供了信息。
该评估采用参与式行动研究(PAR)原则,在原住民研究方法内工作,并优先考虑原住民知识,以迭代方式改进应用程序。在北领地,跨越 11 个不同语言群体,对 11 个语言群体进行了半结构化访谈和焦点小组。当地社区研究人员和原住民研究团队成员协调了会议。记录的、翻译的对话被逐字转录,并使用归纳和演绎的方法进行主题分析。
2018 年 11 月至 2020 年 9 月,来自 11 个语言群体的 94 人参加了 25 次半结构化访谈和 10 次焦点小组。所有参与者都自称为原住民。大多数参与者认为该应用程序将适用于北领地的原住民社区,并提高他们对乙型肝炎的知识。从这些访谈中收集到的信息可以确定五个主要主题:支持应用程序、关系、概念与语言、羞耻和对图像的看法,以及需要修改的错误。
使用 PAR 方法与原住民研究方法相结合,全面完成了对应用程序的“真实生活”评估。这种评估使我们能够在创建另外十种语言版本之前,开发应用程序的更新和增强版本。迭代方法和强大的社区参与是确保应用程序文化安全和适当性的关键。我们建议在原住民环境中避免使用基于知识的评估,以确保获得相关和文化上适当的反馈。