“…Reports have shown that healthcare professionals have used children's stories for therapeutic purposes, precluding harmful behaviours and addictions or dealing with psychosomatic disorders (Pulimeno et al, 2020). It has been used to change health behaviours related to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) status (Edwards et al, 2020;Kalembo et al, 2019); overweight and disability (Harrison et al, 2016); eating and physical activity behaviours (Bellows et al, 2013); early childhood nutrition and parenting intervention (Agustina et al, 2018); avoidance of contaminated objects (Conrad et al, 2020); mental state references (Farkas et al, 2020); self-awareness (Rahimah & Izzaty, 2018); culturally valued qualities and behaviours related to achievement (Suprawati et al, 2014); formation of identities (Watson et al, 2015); disasters (Damayanti et al, 2020); and even road safety (Ahmad et al, 2018). Hartling et al (2010) identified the challenges in making stories which include keeping the authenticity of the story against being evidence-based, addressing consumers' use of the web as the source of health information and striking a balance between being concise, comprehensive and widely applicable, taking into account story length, reading level, narrative mode, depiction of various demographics and exposures to the disease, illustrations and layout.…”