石雕:COVID-19时代公共卫生调查设计研究

Michael Arnold Mages, Estefania Ciliotta Chehade, S. Carr, Miso Kim, Susan Mello, Madison Thomas, Yechan Yang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

COVID-19大流行给涉及人类受试者的公共卫生研究带来了复杂的挑战,需要创造性思维来保持安全和高效的定性数据收集。在本文中,我们描述了一个跨学科团队如何通过将面对面的研讨会转化为家庭设计探针来探索大学生气候变化态度与健康之间的联系,从而克服了这些挑战。探针被有意设计为在封锁期间促进和集中参与,有两个关键的相互作用组成部分:(1)参与者⇔探针,和(2)参与者⇔物理环境。对18个已完成的探测器(充满了绘图、蚀刻石、绘图和写作活动)的专题分析揭示了气候变化感知、生态情感和关键影响领域的丰富光谱。本案例研究深入了解了流行病施加的限制如何为重新定义我们如何在公共卫生研究中收集定性数据提供了一个新的机会,并总结了将这种基于设计的方法整合到向前发展的领域的独特好处。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Carvings in stone: design research for public health investigations in the age of COVID-19
Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic presented complex challenges to public health research involving human subjects, necessitating creative thinking to maintain safe and productive qualitative data collection. In this paper, we describe how an interdisciplinary team overcame these challenges by translating in-person workshops into at-home design probes to explore connections between university students’ climate change attitudes and their health. Probes were purposively designed to facilitate and focus participation during lockdown with two key interactional components: (1) participant ⇔ probe, and (2) participant ⇔ physical environment. Thematic analysis of 18 completed probes (replete with elicitive drawing, etched stone, mapping, and writing activities) revealed a rich spectrum of climate change perceptions, eco-emotions, and key areas of impact. This case study provides insight into how pandemic-imposed restrictions presented a novel opportunity to reconceptualize how we collect qualitative data in public health research and summarizes the unique benefits of integrating such design-based approaches into the field moving forward.
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