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(IT) "Something for us." Co-developing a COVID-19 vaccine social media site for long-term care workers: Presenter(s): Ailyn Sierpe, Dartmouth, United States; Catherine Saunders, Dartmouth, United States

BACKGROUND: Confidence in and uptake of COVID-19 vaccines remains low among long-term care workers (LTCWs) despite U.S. mandates. Largely from underserved groups, LTCWs often feel overlooked in the healthcare system. While difficult to reach with workplace communication interventions, many LTCWs act...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Stevens, Gabrielle, Cantrell, Matthew, Elwyn, Glyn, Engel, Jaclyn, Gonzalez, Melissa, Hayward, Martha, Vargas, Jose Luis Salinas, Onteeru, Manu, Durand, Marie-Anne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9982417/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pec.2022.10.341
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author Stevens, Gabrielle
Cantrell, Matthew
Elwyn, Glyn
Engel, Jaclyn
Gonzalez, Melissa
Hayward, Martha
Vargas, Jose Luis Salinas
Onteeru, Manu
Durand, Marie-Anne
author_facet Stevens, Gabrielle
Cantrell, Matthew
Elwyn, Glyn
Engel, Jaclyn
Gonzalez, Melissa
Hayward, Martha
Vargas, Jose Luis Salinas
Onteeru, Manu
Durand, Marie-Anne
author_sort Stevens, Gabrielle
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Confidence in and uptake of COVID-19 vaccines remains low among long-term care workers (LTCWs) despite U.S. mandates. Largely from underserved groups, LTCWs often feel overlooked in the healthcare system. While difficult to reach with workplace communication interventions, many LTCWs actively use social media. Various social media interventions have improved attitudes and uptake for other vaccines. We aimed to develop a curated social site to increase COVID-19 vaccine confidence (three-arm randomized trial underway). METHODS: Following user-centric design and participatory approaches, we undertook three steps: content identification (1), platform development (2) and community building (3). A LTCW and stakeholder advisory group provided iterative input. For content identification (1), we identified topics of concern about COVID-19 vaccines via desktop research (published literature, public opinion polls and social media), refined via interviews (n=9) and a poll (n=13) with LTCWs. We also conducted a survey with those demographically representative of LTCWs (n=592). We curated and fact checked posts from popular social media platforms addressing the concerns. During platform development (2), we solicited preferences for site design and functionality via LTCW interviews and UX interviews (n=3). We also identified best practices for online community building (3), like comment moderation. RESULTS: Content identification (1) resulted in 400+ posts addressing four categories: COVID-19 in general, and vaccine benefits, risks, and development. The platform we developed (2) is a stylized Wordpress social media site. Users can sort posts by topic or subtopic, as well as react to or comment on posts. To build community (3), we recruited three LTCW ‘community ambassadors’ and instructed them to encourage discussion, acknowledge concerns and offer factual information on COVID-19 vaccines. We also set ‘community standards’ for the site. Implications of research for communication in healthcare: If the site increases vaccine confidence, similar curated social media innovations could be modeled in other populations.
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spelling pubmed-99824172023-03-03 (IT) "Something for us." Co-developing a COVID-19 vaccine social media site for long-term care workers: Presenter(s): Ailyn Sierpe, Dartmouth, United States; Catherine Saunders, Dartmouth, United States Stevens, Gabrielle Cantrell, Matthew Elwyn, Glyn Engel, Jaclyn Gonzalez, Melissa Hayward, Martha Vargas, Jose Luis Salinas Onteeru, Manu Durand, Marie-Anne Patient Educ Couns Article BACKGROUND: Confidence in and uptake of COVID-19 vaccines remains low among long-term care workers (LTCWs) despite U.S. mandates. Largely from underserved groups, LTCWs often feel overlooked in the healthcare system. While difficult to reach with workplace communication interventions, many LTCWs actively use social media. Various social media interventions have improved attitudes and uptake for other vaccines. We aimed to develop a curated social site to increase COVID-19 vaccine confidence (three-arm randomized trial underway). METHODS: Following user-centric design and participatory approaches, we undertook three steps: content identification (1), platform development (2) and community building (3). A LTCW and stakeholder advisory group provided iterative input. For content identification (1), we identified topics of concern about COVID-19 vaccines via desktop research (published literature, public opinion polls and social media), refined via interviews (n=9) and a poll (n=13) with LTCWs. We also conducted a survey with those demographically representative of LTCWs (n=592). We curated and fact checked posts from popular social media platforms addressing the concerns. During platform development (2), we solicited preferences for site design and functionality via LTCW interviews and UX interviews (n=3). We also identified best practices for online community building (3), like comment moderation. RESULTS: Content identification (1) resulted in 400+ posts addressing four categories: COVID-19 in general, and vaccine benefits, risks, and development. The platform we developed (2) is a stylized Wordpress social media site. Users can sort posts by topic or subtopic, as well as react to or comment on posts. To build community (3), we recruited three LTCW ‘community ambassadors’ and instructed them to encourage discussion, acknowledge concerns and offer factual information on COVID-19 vaccines. We also set ‘community standards’ for the site. Implications of research for communication in healthcare: If the site increases vaccine confidence, similar curated social media innovations could be modeled in other populations. Elsevier 2023-04 2023-03-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9982417/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pec.2022.10.341 Text en Since January 2020 Elsevier has created a COVID-19 resource centre with free information in English and Mandarin on the novel coronavirus COVID-19. The COVID-19 resource centre is hosted on Elsevier Connect, the company's public news and information website. Elsevier hereby grants permission to make all its COVID-19-related research that is available on the COVID-19 resource centre - including this research content - immediately available in PubMed Central and other publicly funded repositories, such as the WHO COVID database with rights for unrestricted research re-use and analyses in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for free by Elsevier for as long as the COVID-19 resource centre remains active.
spellingShingle Article
Stevens, Gabrielle
Cantrell, Matthew
Elwyn, Glyn
Engel, Jaclyn
Gonzalez, Melissa
Hayward, Martha
Vargas, Jose Luis Salinas
Onteeru, Manu
Durand, Marie-Anne
(IT) "Something for us." Co-developing a COVID-19 vaccine social media site for long-term care workers: Presenter(s): Ailyn Sierpe, Dartmouth, United States; Catherine Saunders, Dartmouth, United States
title (IT) "Something for us." Co-developing a COVID-19 vaccine social media site for long-term care workers: Presenter(s): Ailyn Sierpe, Dartmouth, United States; Catherine Saunders, Dartmouth, United States
title_full (IT) "Something for us." Co-developing a COVID-19 vaccine social media site for long-term care workers: Presenter(s): Ailyn Sierpe, Dartmouth, United States; Catherine Saunders, Dartmouth, United States
title_fullStr (IT) "Something for us." Co-developing a COVID-19 vaccine social media site for long-term care workers: Presenter(s): Ailyn Sierpe, Dartmouth, United States; Catherine Saunders, Dartmouth, United States
title_full_unstemmed (IT) "Something for us." Co-developing a COVID-19 vaccine social media site for long-term care workers: Presenter(s): Ailyn Sierpe, Dartmouth, United States; Catherine Saunders, Dartmouth, United States
title_short (IT) "Something for us." Co-developing a COVID-19 vaccine social media site for long-term care workers: Presenter(s): Ailyn Sierpe, Dartmouth, United States; Catherine Saunders, Dartmouth, United States
title_sort (it) "something for us." co-developing a covid-19 vaccine social media site for long-term care workers: presenter(s): ailyn sierpe, dartmouth, united states; catherine saunders, dartmouth, united states
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9982417/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pec.2022.10.341
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