Journal of Medical Internet Research (Aug 2024)

Developing an Educational Resource Aimed at Improving Adolescent Digital Health Literacy: Using Co-Design as Research Methodology

  • Callum C Lewis,
  • Melody Taba,
  • Tiffany B Allen,
  • Patrina HY Caldwell,
  • S Rachel Skinner,
  • Melissa Kang,
  • Hamish Henderson,
  • Liam Bray,
  • Madeleine Borthwick,
  • Philippa Collin,
  • Kirsten McCaffery,
  • Karen M Scott

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/49453
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26
p. e49453

Abstract

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BackgroundAdolescence is a key developmental period that affects lifelong health and is impacted by adolescents regularly engaging with digital health information. Adolescents need digital health literacy (DHL) to effectively evaluate the quality and credibility of such information, and to navigate an increasingly complex digital health environment. Few educational resources exist to improve DHL, and few have involved adolescents during design. The co-design approach may hold utility through developing interventions with participants as design partners. ObjectiveThis project aimed to explore the co-design approach in developing an educational resource to improve adolescents’ DHL. MethodsAdolescents (12-17 years old) attended 4 interactive co-design workshops (June 2021-April 2022). Participant perspectives were gathered on DHL and the design of educational resources to improve it. Data generated were analyzed through content analysis to inform educational resource development. ResultsIn total, 27 participants from diverse backgrounds attended the workshops. Insight was gained into participants’ relationship with digital health information, including acceptance of its benefits and relevance, coupled with awareness of misinformation issues, revealing areas of DHL need. Participants provided suggestions for educational resource development that incorporated the most useful aspects of digital formats to develop skills across these domains. The following 4 themes were derived from participant perspectives: ease of access to digital health information, personal and social factors that impacted use, impacts of the plethora of digital information, and anonymity offered by digital sources. Initial participant evaluation of the developed educational resource was largely positive, including useful suggestions for improvement. ConclusionsCo-design elicited and translated authentic adolescent perspectives and design ideas into a functional educational resource. Insight into adolescents’ DHL needs generated targeted educational resource content, with engaging formats, designs, and storylines. Co-design holds promise as an important and empowering tool for developing interventions to improve adolescents’ DHL.