Impact of an Arts-based Public Health Literacy Program Delivered Online to High School Students during the COVID-19 Pandemic.
Hannah R ThompsonJackie MendelsonMaya ZamekGabriel CortezDean SchillingerPublished in: Journal of health communication (2022)
The COVID-19 pandemic, coupled with the domestic socio-political unrest of 2020, provides a critical opportunity to reframe how we engage with youth around health and disease risk. The Bigger Picture (TBP), a spoken word, arts-based public health literacy campaign, uses a social justice and racial equity frame to activate youth around social determinants of health, including salient topics such as type 2 diabetes, COVID-19, climate change, and police violence. This quasi-experimental study determined the impact of providing an online adaptation of TBP during the COVID-19 pandemic to urban, low-income, diverse high school students (3 intervention schools assigned to receive TBP-based spoken word program; 3 comparison schools received a non-health focused spoken word program). We used outcomes derived from the Culture of Health framework, including: (1) health-related mind-sets and expectations; (2) sense of belonging; and (3) civic engagement. Students completed pre/post surveys; a subset of adults and youth from all 6 schools completed semi-structured interviews. TBP participation resulted in measurable shifts in students' mind-sets around structural drivers of health and health inequity and increases in plans for future civic engagement. Arts-based programming with an intentional focus on the social ecological model and health equity appears to impact young people, even when delivered online.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- healthcare
- health information
- public health
- type diabetes
- climate change
- social media
- physical activity
- randomized controlled trial
- young adults
- human health
- sars cov
- cardiovascular disease
- coronavirus disease
- quality improvement
- metabolic syndrome
- adipose tissue
- risk assessment
- emergency department
- glycemic control
- cross sectional