Home
Scholarly Works
Mothers to Babies & Art of Creation: Canadian...
Journal article

Mothers to Babies & Art of Creation: Canadian stakeholder engagement during intervention development

Abstract

AbstractBackground

The 2021 British Medical Research Council framework, outline that effective development of interventions requires engagement of diverse stakeholders. In practice, however, engaging stakeholders in health intervention development often receives insufficient investment. The Mothers to Babies (M2B) Study and its linked Art of Creation (AoC) Intervention Project comprise a joint case study in prioritizing stakeholder engagement.

Methods

From 2016 to 2019, our M2B team dedicated its financial and personnel resources to assessing community health priorities for preventing non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in Hamilton, Canada. Motivated by a “first 1000 days” approach (i.e. health environments through pregnancy and infancy have outsized impacts on NCD risks across a child’s life), we worked with stakeholders to identify acceptable, feasible complex intervention strategies supportive of health behaviours among pregnant Hamiltonians. To this end, we surveyed 434 pregnant people of diverse backgrounds and ran focus groups, interviews, and meetings with 69 stakeholders with diverse orientations to pregnancy and family health provision.

Results

M2B’s work indicated two areas actionable through a complex, behavioural intervention: 1) lack of knowledge about the first 1000 days, and 2) need for platforms for peer support and empowerment. These themes were centred in the development and the stakeholder-engaged implementation/evaluation of the ongoing AoC intervention study. AoC uses outreach through local cultural institutions and arts-based workshops to facilitate understanding of the first 1000 days. AoC increases participants’ knowledge of the first 1000 days, supports social relationships among participants and is enjoyable and empowering.

Conclusions

Investing three years and dedicated personnel to stakeholder engagement by M2B yielded the development of AoC, a complex health promotion intervention that fits the diverse priorities of Hamilton communities.

Authors

McKerracher L; Chin J; Sloboda D

Journal

European Journal of Public Health, Vol. 34, No. Supplement_3,

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Publication Date

November 1, 2024

DOI

10.1093/eurpub/ckae144.272

ISSN

1101-1262

Contact the Experts team