Human-Centered Design of Video-Based Health Education: An Iterative, Collaborative, Community-Based Approach
This research examines a structurally-similar intervention to illuminAid’s approach using collaborative, community-led video to improve behavior change outcomes in health education.
The Adam Et Al. study is an open-access publication and illuminAid takes no ownership over the subject of this study’s research. Please see citation below.
Abstract
Drawing on 5 years of experience designing, producing, and disseminating video health education programs globally, we outline the process of creating accessible, engaging, and relevant video health education content using a community-based, human-centered design approach. We show that this approach can yield a new generation of interventions, which are better aligned with the needs and contexts of target communities. The participation of target communities and local stakeholders in the content production and design process fosters ownership of the content and increases the likelihood that the resulting intervention will resonate within its intended primary audience and be disseminated broadly. Ease of future adaptation for additional global audiences and modification of the content for multiple dissemination pathways are important early considerations to ensure scalability and long-term impact of the intervention. Recent advances in mobile technology can facilitate the dissemination of accessible, engaging health education at scale, thereby enhancing the potential impact of video-based educational tools.
Accessible and engaging health education is a cornerstone of health behavior change. Especially in low- and middle-income countries, increasing access to effective health education can contribute to improved health outcomes. Prior research has identified several characteristics of effective health education interventions. These include the integration of pictures, narratives, and entertainment-education, in which the health messages that make up the educational content are embedded. However, the effectiveness and long-term impact of health messages ultimately depend on how well the end users can identify with the content that is presented. This identification, in turn, is a function of how well the messages correspond to user needs and wants and how this correspondence is communicated through the design characteristics of the health education intervention.
Citation
Adam M, McMahon SA, Prober C, Bärnighausen T, Human-Centered Design of Video-Based Health Education: An Iterative, Collaborative, Community-Based Approach. J Med Internet Res 2019;21(1):e12128, doi:10.2196/12128
Images from a 2022 illuminAid project with CRS Togo conducting related video-assisted community health education work with school children in Kara, Togo.