Young People’s Recommendations for Accessible, Engaging, and Relevant COVID-19 Research Communication in Australia

C. Douglass, Merryn Roe, Michelle Raggatt, Felicia Schlotthauer, Z. Swe, Stephanie Main, Megan S. C. Lim, Lindi Masson
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Abstract

Research is often communicated in ways that fail to reach young people. This participatory study explored young people’s recommendations for making COVID-19 research communication accessible, engaging, and relevant for young people in Australia. We held eight online Zoom workshops with nine young people (18–21 years). Participants recommended researchers share their findings on platforms young people already use, particularly social media. Young people were more likely to engage with research communicated by trusted sources, particularly medical professionals. To keep young people engaged, researchers needed to clearly communicate one main message and simplify evidence using audio-visual formats. To make research communication more relevant, young people recommended sharing findings that related to their experiences throughout the pandemic and providing young people with opportunities to shape research communication and provide feedback. Findings suggest there are opportunities to make COVID-19 research communication more accessible, engaging, and relevant for young people by incorporating their ideas.
年轻人对澳大利亚 COVID-19 研究交流的可及性、参与性和相关性的建议
研究交流的方式往往无法触及年轻人。这项参与式研究探讨了年轻人对如何使 COVID-19 的研究交流对澳大利亚年轻人更方便、更吸引人、更相关的建议。我们与九位年轻人(18-21 岁)举行了八次在线 Zoom 研讨会。与会者建议研究人员在年轻人已经使用的平台上分享他们的研究成果,尤其是社交媒体。年轻人更愿意参与由可信来源(尤其是医疗专业人士)传播的研究。为了让年轻人参与进来,研究人员需要明确传达一个主要信息,并利用视听形式简化证据。为了使研究交流更具相关性,年轻人建议分享与他们在整个大流行病期间的经历相关的研究结果,并为年轻人提供塑造研究交流和提供反馈的机会。研究结果表明,通过采纳年轻人的想法,有机会使 COVID-19 的研究交流对年轻人来说更容易理解、更吸引人、更相关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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