A Digital Diabetes Storytelling Intervention for the Hmong Community: A Pilot Study

Hmong-Americans experience higher rates of diabetes and poorer diabetes-related health outcomes than their White peers. Traditional methods of diabetes education do not reach Hmong patients effectively due to known socioeconomic and literacy barriers. The purpose of this study is to examine the acce...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Health promotion practice p. 15248399231208990
Main Authors: Brown, Kathryn M, Silveira, Cassandra, Xiong, Serena, Lumpkin, Nirmal, Carlin, Caroline, Pang, Catherine J, Schafer, Katherine Montag
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: 06-11-2023
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Summary:Hmong-Americans experience higher rates of diabetes and poorer diabetes-related health outcomes than their White peers. Traditional methods of diabetes education do not reach Hmong patients effectively due to known socioeconomic and literacy barriers. The purpose of this study is to examine the acceptability of a culturally informed diabetes self-management education video tool, using digital storytelling that was created using a community-engaged approach, administered in a single academic clinic that sees a large percentage of Hmong patients. The video tool was successful in the areas of acceptability, story transformation, and story identification; 96% of participants stated that the video felt like something from their community, 88% stated that they could identify with the story, 79% stated that they wanted to know what happened next, and 70% of participants reported that they were motivated to do something different after watching. New methods to improve diabetes education and improve health outcomes in Hmong communities are needed. Culturally informed digital storytelling is one tool, which may be used to improve diabetes health outcomes in this population.
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ISSN:1524-8399
1552-6372
DOI:10.1177/15248399231208990