TY - JOUR
T1 - An Intervention Mapping Approach to Developing a Stroke Literacy Video for Recent Stroke Survivors
T2 - Development and Usability Study
AU - Denny, Mary Carter
AU - Leal, Andrea Ancer
AU - Montiel, Tahani Casameni
AU - Wynne, Keona J.
AU - Edquilang, Gabrielle
AU - Vu, Kim Yen Thi
AU - Vahidy, Farhaan
AU - Savitz, Sean I.
AU - Beauchamp, Jennifer E.S.
AU - Sharrief, Anjail
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors would like to acknowledge the contributions of Melissa Peskin, PhD, and Danika Brodak, MD, MPH, for their critical appraisal of this project from the health promotion perspective. The authors would also like to thank Abhishek Kadiyala and Alejandra Castro for their work in translating the video content into Spanish. Lastly, the authors would like to recognize Elise Siders and Sophie Clayton for their assistance in reviewing and revising the manuscript. MCD received support for this work from the National Institutes of Health T32 training grant awarded to The University of Texas Health Science Center Houston (principal investigator: SIS) from July 2014 to June 2016 (grants 2T32NS007412-16 and 5T32NS007412-17).
Publisher Copyright:
© Mary Carter Denny, Andrea Ancer Leal, Tahani Casameni Montiel, Keona J Wynne, Gabrielle Edquilang, Kim Yen Thi Vu, Farhaan Vahidy, Sean I Savitz, Jennifer ES Beauchamp, Anjail Sharrief.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Background: Most vascular events after stroke may be prevented by modifying vascular risk factors through medical and behavioral interventions. Stroke literacy—an understanding of stroke symptoms, risk factors, and treatment—likely contributes to vascular risk factor control and in turn stroke recurrence risk. Stroke literacy is the lowest among adults belonging to racial and ethnic minority populations in the United States. Video-based interventions targeting stroke literacy may help acute stroke survivors understand stroke and subsequently reduce the risk of stroke recurrence. However, the failure of prior stroke literacy interventions may be due in part to the fact that the interventions were not theory-driven. Intervention mapping (IM) provides a framework for use in the development, implementation, and evaluation of evidence-informed, health-related interventions. Objective: We aimed to develop a video-based educational intervention to improve stroke literacy in hospitalized patients with acute stroke. Methods: The 6-step iterative process of IM was used to develop a video-based educational intervention and related implementation and evaluation plans. The six steps included a needs assessment, the identification of outcomes and change objectives, the selection of theory- and video-based intervention methods and practical applications, the development of a video-based stroke educational intervention, plans for implementation, and evaluation strategies. Results: A 5-minute video-based educational intervention was developed. The IM approach led to successful intervention development by emphasizing stakeholder involvement, generation and adoption, and information retainment in the planning phase of the intervention. A planned approach to video adoption, implementation, and evaluation was also developed. Conclusions: An IM approach guided the development of a 5-minute video-based educational intervention to promote stroke literacy among acute stroke survivors. Future studies are needed to assess the use of technology and digital media to support widespread access and participation in video-based health literacy interventions for populations with acute and chronic stroke. Studies are needed to assess the impact of video-based educational interventions that are paired with stroke systems of care optimization to reduce the risk of stroke recurrence. Furthermore, studies on culturally and linguistically sensitive video-based stroke literacy interventions are needed to address known racial and ethnic disparities in stroke literacy.
AB - Background: Most vascular events after stroke may be prevented by modifying vascular risk factors through medical and behavioral interventions. Stroke literacy—an understanding of stroke symptoms, risk factors, and treatment—likely contributes to vascular risk factor control and in turn stroke recurrence risk. Stroke literacy is the lowest among adults belonging to racial and ethnic minority populations in the United States. Video-based interventions targeting stroke literacy may help acute stroke survivors understand stroke and subsequently reduce the risk of stroke recurrence. However, the failure of prior stroke literacy interventions may be due in part to the fact that the interventions were not theory-driven. Intervention mapping (IM) provides a framework for use in the development, implementation, and evaluation of evidence-informed, health-related interventions. Objective: We aimed to develop a video-based educational intervention to improve stroke literacy in hospitalized patients with acute stroke. Methods: The 6-step iterative process of IM was used to develop a video-based educational intervention and related implementation and evaluation plans. The six steps included a needs assessment, the identification of outcomes and change objectives, the selection of theory- and video-based intervention methods and practical applications, the development of a video-based stroke educational intervention, plans for implementation, and evaluation strategies. Results: A 5-minute video-based educational intervention was developed. The IM approach led to successful intervention development by emphasizing stakeholder involvement, generation and adoption, and information retainment in the planning phase of the intervention. A planned approach to video adoption, implementation, and evaluation was also developed. Conclusions: An IM approach guided the development of a 5-minute video-based educational intervention to promote stroke literacy among acute stroke survivors. Future studies are needed to assess the use of technology and digital media to support widespread access and participation in video-based health literacy interventions for populations with acute and chronic stroke. Studies are needed to assess the impact of video-based educational interventions that are paired with stroke systems of care optimization to reduce the risk of stroke recurrence. Furthermore, studies on culturally and linguistically sensitive video-based stroke literacy interventions are needed to address known racial and ethnic disparities in stroke literacy.
KW - cardiac
KW - digital health
KW - health literacy
KW - patient education
KW - risk factors
KW - stroke
KW - stroke literacy
KW - stroke prevention
KW - transition of care
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85149130416&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85149130416&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2196/31903
DO - 10.2196/31903
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85149130416
VL - 7
JO - JMIR Formative Research
JF - JMIR Formative Research
SN - 2561-326X
M1 - e31903
ER -