Staff and caregivers' perceptions of digital storytelling to increase influenza vaccine confidence in an urban safety-net healthcare system.

Joshua T B Williams, Carly Ritger, Brooke Dorsey Holliman, Amy G Huebschmann, Sean T O'Leary
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Abstract

Background: Myriad risk factors contribute to pediatric influenza vaccination disparities. Digital stories are compelling accounts of lived experience that have been useful in health promotion, especially in minoritized communities. Little is known about how they are perceived as a behavioral intervention to improve influenza vaccination confidence in safety-net healthcare systems.

Objective: To explore staff and caregivers' perceptions of Digital Storytelling (DST) as a behavioral intervention to improve influenza vaccine confidence among caregivers of children.

Methods: This qualitative study was set in two federally qualified health centers in historically Black neighborhoods in Denver, Colorado, USA. Informal group discussions with clinic staff probed perceptions of vaccine disparities, clinic priorities, and DST. Individual interviews with key staff and caregivers of children 6 months to 5 years old explored perceptions of and preferences for DST to improve vaccine confidence. Interviews were recorded and transcribed verbatim. Three researchers analyzed transcripts via directed content analysis using a deductive approach based off the IM4Equity framework. Final themes were member-checked with clinic staff, pediatric providers, and community advisors.

Results: Approximately 70 staff attended informal group discussions; 13 staff and 12 caregivers participated in key informant interviews. Transcripts from group discussions (n = 6) and individual interviews (n = 23) were included in final analyses. Staff felt existing influenza vaccination strategies were inadequate, perceived digital stories meaningfully, and desired equitable implementation without responsibility for implementing them. Caregivers perceived DST as compelling, noted the importance of trusted storytellers, and suggested relatable stories from diverse caregivers could be sent via text messages in the winter to cue caregivers to action.

Conclusions: In this qualitative study, staff and caregivers perceived DST favorably, with preferences specific to DST implementation in a large, diverse health system. Work to develop and implement text-based DST for pediatric influenza vaccination in this context is warranted.

在城市安全网医疗保健系统中,员工和护理人员对数字故事增强流感疫苗信心的看法。
背景:造成儿科流感疫苗接种差异的风险因素众多。数字故事是对生活经验的有力描述,对促进健康很有帮助,尤其是在少数民族社区。但人们如何看待数字故事作为一种行为干预措施,以提高安全网医疗保健系统中流感疫苗接种的信心,对此知之甚少:探讨工作人员和护理人员对数字故事(DST)作为一种行为干预措施的看法,以提高儿童护理人员对流感疫苗接种的信心:这项定性研究在美国科罗拉多州丹佛市历史悠久的黑人区的两家联邦合格医疗中心进行。与诊所员工进行了非正式小组讨论,探讨了对疫苗差异、诊所优先事项和 DST 的看法。对主要工作人员和 6 个月至 5 岁儿童的看护人进行了个别访谈,探讨了他们对 DST 的看法和偏好,以提高对疫苗的信心。访谈进行了录音和逐字记录。三位研究人员采用基于 IM4Equity 框架的演绎法,通过定向内容分析对记录誊本进行了分析。与诊所员工、儿科医疗人员和社区顾问一起对最终主题进行了成员核对:约 70 名员工参加了非正式小组讨论;13 名员工和 12 名护理人员参加了关键信息提供者访谈。小组讨论(n = 6)和个人访谈(n = 23)的记录被纳入最终分析。工作人员认为现有的流感疫苗接种策略不够完善,认为数字故事很有意义,并希望在不承担实施责任的情况下公平实施。护理人员认为 DST 很有吸引力,指出了值得信赖的故事讲述者的重要性,并建议在冬季通过短信发送来自不同护理人员的相关故事,以提醒护理人员采取行动:在这项定性研究中,员工和护理人员对 DST 的看法是积极的,他们对在一个大型、多元化的医疗系统中实施 DST 有着特殊的偏好。在这种情况下,有必要开发和实施基于文本的儿科流感疫苗接种 DST。
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