Gertz Susan, Lee Seung Yeon, Humphries Jaqueline, Pettus-Ogelsby Luwana, Martin Lisa J, Morris Edith, Mabisi Keren, Kohli Eshika, Wilson Kamryn L, Beckham Carissa, Tawwab Vonnie, Sherman Paula, Wijesooriya Julie, Elshaer Shereen, Baker Theresa A, Wagner Erin, Bates Lauren, Hershberger Susan, Butsch Kovacic Melinda
Center for Chemistry Education, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Miami University, Oxford, OH, United States.
Department of Rehabilitation, Exercise, and Nutrition Sciences, College of Allied Health Sciences, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, United States.
Front Public Health. 2025 Sep 8;13:1500711. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1500711. eCollection 2025.
People with lower health literacy and those living in limited-resource communities often experience poorer health outcomes. Leveraging stories for health promotion can be particularly beneficial as stories are more engaging and memorable than other outreach materials. Co-designing health-promotion stories with representatives from target communities ensures their cultural relevance.
We Engage 4 Health (WE4H), a 20 + member community-academic partnership, developed an iterative co-design and testing process for creating engaging and culturally tailored health promotion stories that initiate meaningful discussions about diverse and often complex health topics. Using a graphic-style format, the stories were designed to be read aloud as the story characters together by program participants and lay educators. Herein, we share three case stories. Surveys and an online focus group gathered feedback from 17 community co-designers from a midwestern US city.
Over six years, WE4H's flexible co-design cycle facilitated the creation of over 80 stories. Topics included wellness, chronic disease, cancer, citizen science, research participation, and COVID-19/vaccines. Surveys and focus groups indicated that the co-designers felt their ideas were clearly incorporated into the final stories, which made them feel valued and more trusting of the WE4H team. Many developed a sense of ownership of the materials and were more inclined to share the finished products with their communities, strengthening the sustainability of the community-academic partnership and its related outreach programs.
WE4H's community co-design cycle is iterative and highly transferable for creating culturally appropriate health promotion materials on diverse topics for people of varying abilities, backgrounds, and geographies.
健康素养较低的人群以及生活在资源有限社区的人们往往健康状况较差。利用故事进行健康促进可能特别有益,因为故事比其他宣传材料更具吸引力且更易记忆。与目标社区的代表共同设计健康促进故事可确保其文化相关性。
我们参与健康(WE4H)是一个由20多名成员组成的社区 - 学术合作伙伴关系组织,开发了一个迭代的共同设计和测试过程,以创建引人入胜且符合文化背景的健康促进故事,引发关于各种不同且通常复杂的健康话题的有意义讨论。这些故事采用图文形式,旨在让项目参与者和非专业教育工作者一起以故事角色的身份大声朗读。在此,我们分享三个案例故事。通过调查和在线焦点小组收集了来自美国中西部一个城市的17名社区共同设计者的反馈。
在六年多的时间里,WE4H灵活的共同设计周期促成了80多个故事的创作。主题包括健康、慢性病、癌症、公民科学、研究参与以及新冠病毒/疫苗。调查和焦点小组表明,共同设计者觉得他们的想法被清晰地融入到了最终的故事中,这让他们感到自己受到重视,并且对WE4H团队更加信任。许多人对这些材料产生了主人翁意识,更倾向于与他们的社区分享成品,加强了社区 - 学术伙伴关系及其相关外展项目的可持续性。
WE4H的社区共同设计周期具有迭代性,并且高度可移植,能够为不同能力、背景和地域的人群创作关于各种主题且符合文化背景的健康促进材料。