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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Research Protocols

Date Submitted: Mar 21, 2018
Date Accepted: Aug 14, 2018
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Assessing and Improving the Use of Online Information About Child Development, Education, Health, and Well-Being in Low-Education, Low-Income Parents: Protocol for a Mixed-Methods Multiphase Study

Pluye P, Loignon C, Lagarde F, Doray G, El Sherif R, Granikov V, Gonzalez Reyes A, Bujold M, Grad R, Bartlett G, Barwick M, Schuster T, Turcotte E, Bouthillier F

Assessing and Improving the Use of Online Information About Child Development, Education, Health, and Well-Being in Low-Education, Low-Income Parents: Protocol for a Mixed-Methods Multiphase Study

JMIR Res Protoc 2018;7(11):e186

DOI: 10.2196/resprot.9996

PMID: 30459143

PMCID: 6280034

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

Assessing and Improving the Use of Online Information About Child Development, Education, Health, and Well-Being in Low-Education, Low-Income Parents: Protocol for a Mixed-Methods Multiphase Study

  • Pierre Pluye; 
  • Christine Loignon; 
  • François Lagarde; 
  • Geneviève Doray; 
  • Reem El Sherif; 
  • Vera Granikov; 
  • Araceli Gonzalez Reyes; 
  • Mathieu Bujold; 
  • Roland Grad; 
  • Gillian Bartlett; 
  • Melanie Barwick; 
  • Tibor Schuster; 
  • Emmanuelle Turcotte; 
  • France Bouthillier

Background:

This study is born from a partnership between Web editors of Naître et grandir (N&G) and AboutKidsHealth (AKH) and researchers who developed and validated the Information Assessment Method (IAM). N&G and AKH are popular Canadian websites with high-quality comprehensive information about child development, education, health, and well-being. IAM allows parents to assess online information and provide feedback to Web editors. High-quality online consumer health information improves knowledge, self-efficacy, and health. However, low-socioeconomic status (SES) parents underuse N&G and IAM, despite these parents being more likely to report decreased worries and increased confidence as outcomes from N&G information.

Objective:

The study is aimed to improve low-SES parents’ use of online child information and interaction with Web editors and explore subsequent health outcomes for parents and children.

Methods:

Multiphase mixed-methods design. Our general approach is centered on organizational participatory research. In phase 1, we will conduct a qualitative interpretive study to identify barriers and facilitators to using N&G information and to interacting with N&G editors via IAM; interview more than 10 low-SES parents about their experience with N&G and IAM and more than 10 nonusers of N&G and IAM; and use thematic analysis to identify main barriers and facilitators. In phase 2, we will integrate parents’ views (phase 1 findings) in N&G and IAM and implement a new version: IAM+N&G+. In phase 3, we will conduct a quantitative prospective longitudinal study (pre-/postimplementation monitoring of knowledge use and outcomes). We will compare the use of original (IAM and N&G) and new (IAM+ and N&G+) versions using Google Analytics variables, IAM variables, a material and social deprivation index, and demographics. We anticipate increased use post implementation (linear mixed modeling). In phase 4, we will conduct a qualitative descriptive study on outcomes of information use. We will interview more than 30 low-SES parents who receive and rate the N&G+ newsletter using IAM+ and analyze data in the form of life histories to describe how parents and children experience perceived outcomes.

Results:

The project was funded in 2017 by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and received an ethics approval by the McGill University’s institutional review board. Data collection for phase 1 was completed in 2018. Phases 2 to 4 will be conducted until 2020. Findings from this study will also be used to develop a free toolkit, useful to all Web editors, with recommendations for improving health information for low-SES persons and interactions with them using IAM.

Conclusions:

The results of this study will provide a deep understanding of how low-SES parents use online child information and interact with Web editors. Following the implementation of IAM+N&G+, results will also elucidate subsequent health outcomes for low-SES parents and children after interaction with Web editors has been optimized.

International Registered Report:

PRR1-10.2196/9996


 Citation

Please cite as:

Pluye P, Loignon C, Lagarde F, Doray G, El Sherif R, Granikov V, Gonzalez Reyes A, Bujold M, Grad R, Bartlett G, Barwick M, Schuster T, Turcotte E, Bouthillier F

Assessing and Improving the Use of Online Information About Child Development, Education, Health, and Well-Being in Low-Education, Low-Income Parents: Protocol for a Mixed-Methods Multiphase Study

JMIR Res Protoc 2018;7(11):e186

DOI: 10.2196/resprot.9996

PMID: 30459143

PMCID: 6280034

Per the author's request the PDF is not available.