Currently submitted to: Journal of Participatory Medicine
Date Submitted: Feb 17, 2025
Open Peer Review Period: Mar 5, 2025 - Apr 30, 2025
(currently open for review)
Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited.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.
More than just a Saturday morning cartoon: Utilizing participatory animation for digital health intervention promotion
ABSTRACT
Digital-based health interventions (DHIs), defined as health services delivered electronically, have proven to be effective tools for health promotion. However, user retention remains low, an outcome predicted by insufficient integration of socio-cultural determinants and limited user engagement. This study explores participatory animation (PA), a methodology involving community partnerships in creating animated content as a strategy to mitigate retention rates. PA is a multi-step production process capable of creating engaging and efficacious multimedia deployable stimuli while leveraging a co-creation process through participants’ oral and visual design assessment. However, this method has been historically underutilized in health scholarship. The urgent need to develop effective DHIs emphasizes the promise of PA as a methodological frontier. This paper offers a perspective on PA’s practical and theoretical potential to improve digital intervention design and function from existing literature.
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Copyright
© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.