Leveraging Stories to Promote Health and Prevent Cancer

Author:

Butsch Kovacic Melinda12ORCID,Gertz Susan Enid3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Department of Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio.

2. 2Department of Rehabilitation, Exercise, and Nutrition Sciences, University of Cincinnati College of Allied Health Sciences, Cincinnati, Ohio.

3. 3Center for Chemistry Education, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio.

Abstract

Abstract Many challenges are associated with communicating health messages to promote healthy behaviors and prevent cancer including limited health literacy levels, varied life experiences, and different learning styles. In this issue of Cancer Prevention Research, Chen and colleagues codeveloped personal, audiovisual digital stories using community-engaged, Digital Storytelling. Their goal was to improve the attitudes of and vaccination intention for human papillomavirus among Vietnamese American mothers of unvaccinated children ages 11–14. This spotlight discusses the implications of their results and further the broader use of stories as tools to promote health and prevent cancer—particularly in underserved minority and immigrant populations. See related article, p. 465

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

Reference28 articles.

1. Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection;Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

2. Cervical cancer incidence, mortality, and survival among Asian subgroups in California, 1990–2004;Bates;Cancer,2008

3. Cervical cancer incidence among 6 Asian ethnic groups in the United States, 1996 through 2004;Wang;Cancer,2010

4. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention;CDC Newsroom

5. A digital storytelling intervention for vietnamese american mothers to promote their children's HPV vaccination;Chen;Cancer Prev Res,2022

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