Kikut-Stein Ava, Givan Kathleen, Branson Paulette, Fishman Jeffrey, Bailey Kavon, Paolicelli Michelle, Crockett Toni, Morris Tamera, Adesipo Ajibola, Allen Dayana, Blanco-Liz Ashley, Bonds Leticia-Faith, Brooks Ny'zera, Carriker Malaysia, Francis Katherine, Jean Pierre Micah, Konner Holly, Myers Ryen, Newkirk Naiim, Poole Milan, Riina Nolan, Robinson Margaret, Rubens Valerie, Savage Abdullah, Savage Maryam, Sy Dahirou, Zhou Xuefei, Tan Andy
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.
Institute of Health and Society, University of Oslo.
Health Commun. 2025 May;40(6):1062-1077. doi: 10.1080/10410236.2024.2386713. Epub 2024 Jul 31.
Youth offer valuable insight on health communication needs and solutions in their communities. We propose youth participatory action communication research (YPACR) as a model for health campaign development that engages youth perspectives in applying systematic theory-informed communication research to addressing youth-identified health priorities. YPACR informed a series of paid high school internship programs in West Philadelphia, in which youth interns identified mental health help-seeking communication as a need among peers. In Phase 1, guided by the reasoned action approach and Hornik & Woolf method, youth interns conducted a survey measuring behavioral beliefs, normative beliefs, and control beliefs associated with mental health help-seeking, as well as trusted sources of mental health information, among local high school students. Survey results suggested control (self-efficacy) was an important message target and peers were trusted mental health information sources. In Phase 2, youth interns developed TikTok-style messages focused on strengthening control beliefs and promoting a youth-selected mental health support resource. Youth interns distributed an online survey experiment to test whether youth-created messages shown alongside resource information increased help-seeking self-efficacy compared to an information-only control. The YPACR framework contributed to youth-relevant campaign goals, study measurements, recruitment approaches, data interpretation, and message design. We discuss the benefits and challenges of this youth-driven health campaign development model and recommendations for future research.
青少年对于其所在社区的健康传播需求及解决方案有着宝贵的见解。我们提出青少年参与式行动传播研究(YPACR)作为健康宣传活动开展的一种模式,该模式让青少年的观点参与进来,将系统的理论指导传播研究应用于解决青少年确定的健康优先事项。YPACR为西费城一系列有薪酬的高中实习项目提供了信息,在这些项目中,青少年实习生确定同伴之间寻求心理健康帮助的传播是一项需求。在第一阶段,在理性行动方法以及霍尼克和伍尔夫方法的指导下,青少年实习生对当地高中生进行了一项调查,测量与寻求心理健康帮助相关的行为信念、规范信念和控制信念,以及心理健康信息的可靠来源。调查结果表明控制(自我效能感)是一个重要的信息目标,同伴是值得信赖的心理健康信息来源。在第二阶段,青少年实习生制作了TikTok风格的信息,重点是增强控制信念并推广一种青少年选择的心理健康支持资源。青少年实习生进行了一项在线调查实验,以测试与仅提供信息的对照组相比,与资源信息一起展示的青少年制作的信息是否会提高寻求帮助的自我效能感。YPACR框架有助于实现与青少年相关的宣传活动目标、研究测量、招募方法、数据解读和信息设计。我们讨论了这种由青少年推动的健康宣传活动发展模式的益处和挑战以及对未来研究的建议。