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Youth Participatory Action Communication Research: A Model for Developing Youth-Driven Health Campaigns.

Authors :
Kikut-Stein A
Givan K
Branson P
Fishman J
Bailey K
Paolicelli M
Crockett T
Morris T
Adesipo A
Allen D
Blanco-Liz A
Bonds LF
Brooks N
Carriker M
Francis K
Jean Pierre M
Konner H
Myers R
Newkirk N
Poole M
Riina N
Robinson M
Rubens V
Savage A
Savage M
Sy D
Zhou X
Tan A
Source :
Health communication [Health Commun] 2024 Jul 31, pp. 1-16. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jul 31.
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Ahead of Print

Abstract

Youth offer valuable insight on health communication needs and solutions in their communities. We propose youth participatory action communication research (YPACR) as a model for health campaign development that engages youth perspectives in applying systematic theory-informed communication research to addressing youth-identified health priorities. YPACR informed a series of paid high school internship programs in West Philadelphia, in which youth interns identified mental health help-seeking communication as a need among peers. In Phase 1, guided by the reasoned action approach and Hornik & Woolf method, youth interns conducted a survey measuring behavioral beliefs, normative beliefs, and control beliefs associated with mental health help-seeking, as well as trusted sources of mental health information, among local high school students. Survey results suggested control (self-efficacy) was an important message target and peers were trusted mental health information sources. In Phase 2, youth interns developed TikTok-style messages focused on strengthening control beliefs and promoting a youth-selected mental health support resource. Youth interns distributed an online survey experiment to test whether youth-created messages shown alongside resource information increased help-seeking self-efficacy compared to an information-only control. The YPACR framework contributed to youth-relevant campaign goals, study measurements, recruitment approaches, data interpretation, and message design. We discuss the benefits and challenges of this youth-driven health campaign development model and recommendations for future research.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1532-7027
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Health communication
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39081194
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/10410236.2024.2386713