| Literature DB >> 34617839 |
Danielle M Muscat, Julie Ayre, Don Nutbeam, Anne Harris, Lynette Tunchon, Dipti Zachariah, Kirsten J McCaffery.
Abstract
Few health literacy interventions exist for new parents. We developed a group-based health literacy program ("Parenting Plus"), which was initially tested in a feasibility study in 2018. In this brief report, we describe how feasibility findings were incorporated into the Parenting Plus program. Using a codesign process with patient partners (feasibility study participants) and health staff to revise the program, version 2 was tested in a single-site pilot using pre- and post-intervention testing. Parents older than age 16 years whose child was between ages 4 and 26 weeks were recruited from nurse home visits in western Sydney, Australia. Interested participants attended the free 4-week health literacy program (four 2-hour sessions) delivered by a trained facilitator. Piloting suggested the revised program is acceptable to new parents, has good retention (93% over the course of 4 weeks), and can improve health literacy skills, including access to reliable health information and services. Our iterative development and codesign approach integrated learnings from various sources to inform the design of an evidence-based health literacy intervention. We now move to an effectiveness implementation hybrid trial to test intervention effectiveness (health literacy skill development) and support translation of research findings into routine practice. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2021;5(4):e276-e282.].Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34617839 PMCID: PMC8499357 DOI: 10.3928/24748307-20210911-01
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Lit Res Pract ISSN: 2474-8307
Baseline, Follow-Up, and Change Scores Related to Reliable Information Seeking[a]
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| Heard of the following | |||
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| BeyondBlue | 12 (86) | 12 (86) | 0 (0) |
| Raising Children Network | 11 (79) | 10 (71) | −1 (–7) |
| Lifeline | 11 (79) | 10 (71) | −1 (–7) |
| Healthdirect | 8 (57) | 12 (86) | 4 (29) |
| Mothersafe | 8 (57) | 8 (57) | 0 (0) |
| Get Healthy New South Wales | 6 (43) | 10 (71) | 4 (29) |
| Perinatal Anxiety and Depression Australia | 6 (43) | 12 (86) | 6 (43) |
| Black Dog Institute | 5 (36) | 8 (57) | 3 (21) |
| Pregnancy Birth and Baby | 5 (36) | 11 (79) | 6 (43) |
| Parent Line New South Wales | 2 (14) | 6 (43) | 4 (29) |
| NPS MedicineWise Medicines Line | 1 (7) | 4 (29) | 3 (22) |
| Centre of Perinatal Excellence | 1 (7) | 6 (43) | 5 (36) |
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| Accessed the following (past 4 weeks) | |||
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| Raising Children Network | 8 (57) | 9 (64) | 1 (7) |
| Mothersafe | 3 (21) | 3 (21) | 0 (0) |
| Pregnancy Birth and Baby | 3 (21) | 5 (36) | 2 (14) |
| Healthdirect | 2 (14) | 4 (29) | 2 (14) |
| Get Healthy New South Wales | 1 (7) | 4 (29) | 3 (22) |
| Perinatal Anxiety and Depression Australia | 1 (7) | 1 (7) | 0 (0) |
| Centre of Perinatal Excellence | 0 (0) | 1 (7) | 1 (7) |
| BeyondBlue | 0 (0) | 1 (7) | 1 (7) |
| Parent Line New South Wales | 0 (0) | 1 (7) | 1 (7) |
| Lifeline | 0 (0) | 1 (7) | 1 (7) |
| NPS MedicineWise Medicines Line | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Black Dog Institute | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
Note.
Parental awareness and use (within the past 4 weeks) of reliable health services and information sources (Australian government and non-government organizations) was assessed via participant self-report.
Illustrative Quotes From Focus Group Data
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| Topics relevant and interesting | “I'm a planner, so I was already thinking about how to go about solids. So, for me, I was just like yep, that's good…that was already one of the questions I wanted to ask.” |
| “Looking at the home for safety…I haven't found that covered anywhere else… so I thought that was pretty good.” | |
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| Valuing the opportunity to socialize through group discussions | “And being able to come here once a week and spend some time with other mums and know that you're not the only one that's going through a lot of things and…you know, that's a big help with your mental health.” |
| “I felt that this week there was a lot more group chat and everyone got to voice. | |
| Whereas in the previous weeks I felt…there wasn't that much time to stop and go, right, what are your thoughts, let's have a group chat about this. I think that that could be incorporated more into the previous weeks.” | |
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| Awareness of available resources | “[The course gave] us resources and the apps that I didn't know about, and then we can go have a look ourselves, so learning about those…I didn't know they were there.” |
| “You've got very specific helpful government resources in that program. And then you send out the slides so we can just click on the links and go, right, there's this… website.” | |
| “I really quite liked [the Love Talk Sing Play app]…it's something that I have used.” | |
| “So this program's made me more aware of how I can seek support and gain information that's going to be beneficial to me.” | |
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| Usefulness of critical health literacy skills | “I think there was some really good guidance on how we can take a look and do our own research as well.” |
| “…They're not things I had thought about previously. Like I just noticed that I'd Google, and I'd just take off the first couple of ones and look for common themes, and then I'd be on my way. But now I try and look, ok, when was it written and who wrote it…” | |
| “I'm not falling for the, um…the shelf products and things. Yeah, before when if… if it's written ‘organic’… (laughs)…‘100% natural’, I would always fall for it. But now I'm like, read the back, mmm (laughs)… skeptical, so…” | |
| “I think there was one… activity where we had to, um, put down a play plan or development plan… so since then we've been reading books every night.” | |
| “[When you go to the doctor] you're a bit more aware of like…maybe say something instead of just going, oh ok. Like questioning it and stuff.” | |