2023
Warren, Jillian L., Antle, Alissa N., Kitson, Alexandra, Davoodi, Alireza
In: International Journal of Child-Computer Interaction, pp. 100596, 2023, ISSN: 2212-8689.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Child-Computer Interaction, Covid-19, Digital health platforms, Intergenerational codesign, mental health, no child alone, Private social networks, Socioemotional wellbeing
@article{WARREN2023100596,
title = {A codesign study exploring needs, strategies, and opportunities for digital health platforms to address pandemic-related impacts on children and families},
author = {Jillian L. Warren and Alissa N. Antle and Alexandra Kitson and Alireza Davoodi},
url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212868923000338},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcci.2023.100596},
issn = {2212-8689},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-01-01},
urldate = {2023-01-01},
journal = {International Journal of Child-Computer Interaction},
pages = {100596},
abstract = {In this paper we contribute seven design opportunities for future digital health platforms, like Private Social Networks (PSNs), focused on supporting the (un)met mental health and socioemotional needs of children (∼8-12 years old) and their supporting adults (parents and teachers) in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. These were derived from the thematic analysis of a two-phase co-design study with children, their parents, and their teachers (Phase 1), and employees at our industry partner Company X (Phase 2). Our thematic findings contribute understanding about the types of experiences children, families and educators have had, and open the conversation around designing digital health platforms that can support mental health and socioemotional wellbeing in children and their supporting adults. Through individualized tracking, social capabilities, and secure, vetted sources of support, PSNs offer unique opportunities to (1) provide children with a safe space to share, reflect and come together, (2) extend existing practices related to SEL across children’s changing contexts and developmental needs, (2) support an integrated digital ecosystem of care across different stakeholders that allows for engagement and targeted interventions, and (3) support niche or marginalized communities in gaining access to relevant, meaningful and identity-specific support that may not otherwise be available.},
keywords = {Child-Computer Interaction, Covid-19, Digital health platforms, Intergenerational codesign, mental health, no child alone, Private social networks, Socioemotional wellbeing},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
In this paper we contribute seven design opportunities for future digital health platforms, like Private Social Networks (PSNs), focused on supporting the (un)met mental health and socioemotional needs of children (∼8-12 years old) and their supporting adults (parents and teachers) in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. These were derived from the thematic analysis of a two-phase co-design study with children, their parents, and their teachers (Phase 1), and employees at our industry partner Company X (Phase 2). Our thematic findings contribute understanding about the types of experiences children, families and educators have had, and open the conversation around designing digital health platforms that can support mental health and socioemotional wellbeing in children and their supporting adults. Through individualized tracking, social capabilities, and secure, vetted sources of support, PSNs offer unique opportunities to (1) provide children with a safe space to share, reflect and come together, (2) extend existing practices related to SEL across children’s changing contexts and developmental needs, (2) support an integrated digital ecosystem of care across different stakeholders that allows for engagement and targeted interventions, and (3) support niche or marginalized communities in gaining access to relevant, meaningful and identity-specific support that may not otherwise be available.