Frontiers in Psychiatry (Jul 2020)

The Cultural Adaptation of Step-by-Step: An Intervention to Address Depression Among Chinese Young Adults

  • Hao Fong Sit,
  • Rui Ling,
  • Rui Ling,
  • Agnes Iok Fong Lam,
  • Agnes Iok Fong Lam,
  • Agnes Iok Fong Lam,
  • Wen Chen,
  • Carl A. Latkin,
  • Brian J. Hall,
  • Brian J. Hall,
  • Brian J. Hall

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00650
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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BackgroundDigital mental health interventions leverage digital communication technology to address the mental health needs of populations. Culturally adapting interventions can lead to a successful, scalable mental health intervention implementation, and cultural adaptation of digital mental health interventions is a critical component to implementing interventions at scale within contexts where mental health services are not well supported.ObjectiveThe study aims to describe the cultural adaptation of a digital mental health intervention Step-by-Step in order to address depression among Chinese young adults.MethodsCultural adaptation was carried out in four phases following Ecological Validity Model: (1) stage setting and expert consultation; (2) preliminary content adaptation; (3) iterative content adaptation with community members; (4) finalized adaptation with community feedback meetings. Cognitive interviewing was applied to probe for relevance, acceptability, comprehensibility, and completeness of illustrations and text. Six mental health experts and 34 Chinese young adults were recruited for key informant interviews and focus group discussions.ResultsWe adapted the text and illustrations to fit the culture among Chinese young adults. Eight elements of the intervention were chosen as the targets of cultural adaptation (e.g., language, metaphors, content). Samples of major adaptations included: adding scenarios related to university life (relevance), changing leading characters from a physician to a peer and a cartoon (acceptability), incorporating two language versions (traditional Chinese and simplified Chinese) in the intervention (comprehensibility), and maintaining fundamental therapeutic components (completeness).ConclusionThis study showed the utility of using Ecological Validity Model and a four-point procedure framework for cultural adaptation and achieved a culturally appropriate version of the Step-by-Step program for Chinese young adults.

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