2019
DOI: 10.1177/1524839918825130
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Restor(y)ing Health: A Conceptual Model of the Effects of Digital Storytelling

Abstract: We currently see an interdisciplinary shift toward a “participatory turn” in health research and promotion under which community engagement, shared decision making and planning, and the use of visual and digital methods have become paramount. Digital storytelling (DST) is one such innovative and engaging method increasingly used in applied health interventions, with a growing body of research identifying its value. Despite its increasing use, a standard approach to empirically assess the impacts on individuals… Show more

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Cited by 49 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…Our study is designed according to a constructivist grounded theory approach [33], which is particularly suitable for capturing the different angles of the DST workshop based on the conceptual model of the effects of DST on socioemotional well-being [34]. Steps in the qualitative analytical process included line-by-line coding, constant comparative analysis, and codebook development based on sorting and synthesis of codes into categories and major themes [35].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our study is designed according to a constructivist grounded theory approach [33], which is particularly suitable for capturing the different angles of the DST workshop based on the conceptual model of the effects of DST on socioemotional well-being [34]. Steps in the qualitative analytical process included line-by-line coding, constant comparative analysis, and codebook development based on sorting and synthesis of codes into categories and major themes [35].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the trend was still to drill down to individual knowledge and “lifestyle choices,” you’ll see how HPP authors pulled up to context: analyzing settings (Poland et al, 2009), working conditions of low-wage workers (Nobrega et al, 2016), environmental influences on tobacco use among Asian American and Pacific Islander youth (Tanjasiri et al, 2013), and corner store and wholesaler interventions (Schwendler et al, 2017). Some of the more recent articles were selected to represent approaches that thread through HPP ’s pages over the second decade: barbershop interventions (Jemmott et al, 2017), community health workers (Lohr et al, 2018), implementation research (Livingood et al, 2020), community–academic partnerships (Pearson et al, 2019), and digital storytelling (Fiddian-Green et al, 2019).…”
Section: For 20: the Hpp Listmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A subset of illness narratives are first-person digital narratives; short videos produced independently by, or in partnership with the person to tell their personal experience [18]. These can be a combination of short video and audio clips complemented by images, animation and music.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%