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Development of the informed health choices resources in four countries to teach primary school children to assess claims about treatment effects: a qualitative study employing a user-centred approach

BACKGROUND: People of all ages are flooded with health claims about treatment effects (benefits and harms of treatments). Many of these are not reliable, and many people lack skills to assess their reliability. Primary school is the ideal time to begin to teach these skills, to lay a foundation for...

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Autores principales: Nsangi, Allen, Semakula, Daniel, Rosenbaum, Sarah E., Oxman, Andrew David, Oxman, Matt, Morelli, Angela, Austvoll-Dahlgren, Astrid, Kaseje, Margaret, Mugisha, Michael, Uwitonze, Anne-Marie, Glenton, Claire, Lewin, Simon, Fretheim, Atle, Sewankambo, Nelson Kaulukusi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7008535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32055405
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40814-020-00565-6
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author Nsangi, Allen
Semakula, Daniel
Rosenbaum, Sarah E.
Oxman, Andrew David
Oxman, Matt
Morelli, Angela
Austvoll-Dahlgren, Astrid
Kaseje, Margaret
Mugisha, Michael
Uwitonze, Anne-Marie
Glenton, Claire
Lewin, Simon
Fretheim, Atle
Sewankambo, Nelson Kaulukusi
author_facet Nsangi, Allen
Semakula, Daniel
Rosenbaum, Sarah E.
Oxman, Andrew David
Oxman, Matt
Morelli, Angela
Austvoll-Dahlgren, Astrid
Kaseje, Margaret
Mugisha, Michael
Uwitonze, Anne-Marie
Glenton, Claire
Lewin, Simon
Fretheim, Atle
Sewankambo, Nelson Kaulukusi
author_sort Nsangi, Allen
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: People of all ages are flooded with health claims about treatment effects (benefits and harms of treatments). Many of these are not reliable, and many people lack skills to assess their reliability. Primary school is the ideal time to begin to teach these skills, to lay a foundation for continued learning and enable children to make well-informed health choices, as they grow older. However, these skills are rarely being taught and yet there are no rigorously developed and evaluated resources for teaching these skills. OBJECTIVES: To develop the Informed Health Choices (IHC) resources (for learning and teaching people to assess claims about the effects of treatments) for primary school children and teachers. METHODS: We prototyped, piloted, and user-tested resources in four settings that included Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda, and Norway. We employed a user-centred approach to designing IHC resources which entailed multiple iterative cycles of development (determining content scope, generating ideas, prototyping, testing, analysing and refining) based on continuous close collaboration with teachers and children. RESULTS: We identified 24 Key Concepts that are important for children to learn. We developed a comic book and a separate exercise book to introduce and explain the Key Concepts to the children, combining lessons with exercises and classroom activities. We developed a teachers’ guide to supplement the resources for children. CONCLUSION: By employing a user-centred approach to designing resources to teach primary children to think critically about treatment claims and choices, we developed learning resources that end users experienced as useful, easy to use and well-suited to use in diverse classroom settings.
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spelling pubmed-70085352020-02-13 Development of the informed health choices resources in four countries to teach primary school children to assess claims about treatment effects: a qualitative study employing a user-centred approach Nsangi, Allen Semakula, Daniel Rosenbaum, Sarah E. Oxman, Andrew David Oxman, Matt Morelli, Angela Austvoll-Dahlgren, Astrid Kaseje, Margaret Mugisha, Michael Uwitonze, Anne-Marie Glenton, Claire Lewin, Simon Fretheim, Atle Sewankambo, Nelson Kaulukusi Pilot Feasibility Stud Research BACKGROUND: People of all ages are flooded with health claims about treatment effects (benefits and harms of treatments). Many of these are not reliable, and many people lack skills to assess their reliability. Primary school is the ideal time to begin to teach these skills, to lay a foundation for continued learning and enable children to make well-informed health choices, as they grow older. However, these skills are rarely being taught and yet there are no rigorously developed and evaluated resources for teaching these skills. OBJECTIVES: To develop the Informed Health Choices (IHC) resources (for learning and teaching people to assess claims about the effects of treatments) for primary school children and teachers. METHODS: We prototyped, piloted, and user-tested resources in four settings that included Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda, and Norway. We employed a user-centred approach to designing IHC resources which entailed multiple iterative cycles of development (determining content scope, generating ideas, prototyping, testing, analysing and refining) based on continuous close collaboration with teachers and children. RESULTS: We identified 24 Key Concepts that are important for children to learn. We developed a comic book and a separate exercise book to introduce and explain the Key Concepts to the children, combining lessons with exercises and classroom activities. We developed a teachers’ guide to supplement the resources for children. CONCLUSION: By employing a user-centred approach to designing resources to teach primary children to think critically about treatment claims and choices, we developed learning resources that end users experienced as useful, easy to use and well-suited to use in diverse classroom settings. BioMed Central 2020-02-10 /pmc/articles/PMC7008535/ /pubmed/32055405 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40814-020-00565-6 Text en © The Author(s) 2020 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Nsangi, Allen
Semakula, Daniel
Rosenbaum, Sarah E.
Oxman, Andrew David
Oxman, Matt
Morelli, Angela
Austvoll-Dahlgren, Astrid
Kaseje, Margaret
Mugisha, Michael
Uwitonze, Anne-Marie
Glenton, Claire
Lewin, Simon
Fretheim, Atle
Sewankambo, Nelson Kaulukusi
Development of the informed health choices resources in four countries to teach primary school children to assess claims about treatment effects: a qualitative study employing a user-centred approach
title Development of the informed health choices resources in four countries to teach primary school children to assess claims about treatment effects: a qualitative study employing a user-centred approach
title_full Development of the informed health choices resources in four countries to teach primary school children to assess claims about treatment effects: a qualitative study employing a user-centred approach
title_fullStr Development of the informed health choices resources in four countries to teach primary school children to assess claims about treatment effects: a qualitative study employing a user-centred approach
title_full_unstemmed Development of the informed health choices resources in four countries to teach primary school children to assess claims about treatment effects: a qualitative study employing a user-centred approach
title_short Development of the informed health choices resources in four countries to teach primary school children to assess claims about treatment effects: a qualitative study employing a user-centred approach
title_sort development of the informed health choices resources in four countries to teach primary school children to assess claims about treatment effects: a qualitative study employing a user-centred approach
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7008535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32055405
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40814-020-00565-6
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