Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, School of Psychological Sciences, Monash University, Clayton, Australia.
Department of Human Centred Computing, Monash University, Clayton, Australia.
JMIR Form Res. 2024 Nov 22;8:e55639. doi: 10.2196/55639.
Adverse childhood experiences are strongly associated with mental disorders in young people. Parenting interventions are available through community health settings and can intervene with adverse childhood experiences that are within a parent's capacity to modify. Technology can minimize common barriers associated with engaging in face-to-face parenting interventions. However, families experiencing adversity face unique barriers to engaging with technology-assisted parenting interventions. Formative research using co-design methodology to provide a deep contextual understanding of these barriers can help overcome unique barriers and ensure these families can capitalize on the benefits of technology-assisted parenting interventions.
This study aims to innovate the parenting support delivered by a community health and social service with technology by adapting an existing, evidence-based, technology-assisted parenting intervention.
Staff (n=3) participated in dialogues (n=2) and co-design workshops (n=8) exploring needs and preferences for a technology-assisted parenting intervention and iteratively developing a prototype intervention (Parenting Resilient Kids [PaRK]-Lite). Parents (n=3) received PaRK-Lite and participated in qualitative interviews to provide feedback on their experience and PaRK-Lite's design.
PaRK-Lite's hybrid design leverages simple and familiar modes of technology (podcasts) to deliver intervention content and embeds reflective practice into service provision (microcoaching) to enhance parents' empowerment and reduce service dependency. A training session, manuals, session plans, and templates were also developed to support the delivery of microcoaching. Feedback data from parents overall indicated that PaRK-Lite met their needs, suggesting that service providers can play a key role in the early phases of service innovation for parents.
The co-designed technology-assisted parenting intervention aims to offer both parents and clinicians a novel and engaging resource for intervening with maladaptive parenting, contributing to efforts to respond to childhood adversity and improve child mental health. Future research in the field of human-computer interaction and health service design can consider our findings in creating engaging interventions that have a positive impact on the well-being of children and families.
不良童年经历与年轻人的精神障碍密切相关。通过社区卫生机构提供育儿干预措施,可以干预父母有能力改变的不良童年经历。技术可以最大限度地减少与参与面对面育儿干预措施相关的常见障碍。然而,面临逆境的家庭在参与技术辅助育儿干预措施方面面临独特的障碍。使用共同设计方法进行的形成性研究可以深入了解这些障碍,有助于克服独特的障碍,并确保这些家庭能够从技术辅助育儿干预措施中受益。
本研究旨在通过调整现有的、基于证据的技术辅助育儿干预措施,对社区卫生和社会服务提供的育儿支持进行创新。
工作人员(n=3)参与了对话(n=2)和共同设计研讨会(n=8),探讨了对技术辅助育儿干预措施的需求和偏好,并迭代开发了原型干预措施(育儿韧性儿童[PaRK]-Lite)。家长(n=3)接受了 PaRK-Lite,并参与了定性访谈,以提供他们对体验和 PaRK-Lite 设计的反馈。
PaRK-Lite 的混合设计利用简单而熟悉的技术模式(播客)来提供干预内容,并将反思性实践嵌入服务提供中(微指导),以增强家长的授权感并减少对服务的依赖。还开发了培训课程、手册、课程计划和模板,以支持微指导的交付。家长的反馈数据总体表明,PaRK-Lite 满足了他们的需求,这表明服务提供者可以在父母服务创新的早期阶段发挥关键作用。
共同设计的技术辅助育儿干预措施旨在为父母和临床医生提供一种新颖而引人入胜的资源,用于干预适应不良的育儿方式,为应对儿童逆境和改善儿童心理健康做出贡献。在人机交互和卫生服务设计领域的未来研究中,可以考虑我们的发现,创建对儿童和家庭福祉产生积极影响的引人入胜的干预措施。