Slides - Digital Strategies for Health Communication
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Transcript Slides - Digital Strategies for Health Communication
Communication with Parents
and Patients Throughout the
Cancer Treatment Process
A Comparison of the Online Media of The Dana-Farber Boston
Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorder Center, St. Jude’s
Children’s Research Hospital, and Tufts Medical Center’s
Floating Hospital for Children
Sarah Soffer
Tufts University School of Medicine-PHPD
MPH in Health Communication Candidate
Dana Farber Boston Children’s Cancer and
Blood Disorders Center
Comprehensive Cancer
Treatment
Physical, Psychosocial,
Mental Health
In-House Supportive
Services and Resources
Long-term Follow-Up Care
and Support
Target Audience: Parents of
Prospective Patients,
Survivors of Pediatric
Cancer
SWOT Analysis
Strengths
Strong Online Presence
Recognizable Institutes
Large amount of educational
material for parents
Weaknesses
Health literacy issue in some
YouTube videos
Lack of kid-friendly educational
resources for patients
Limited interactive media
Anecdotal information for
parents
Difficult to navigate between
sites
Multiple formats to media
Multiple twitter and facebook
accounts
Visually appealing media
Not well targeted
SWOT Analysis (cont’d)
Opportunities
High demand for cancerrelated educational
materials
Parent and patient
High/Increasing online
presence of pediatric and
parent populations
Threats
Large amount of unreliable
information circulating
Appeal of instead visiting
single-institution cancer
care center websites
Recommendations for Dana
Farber/Boston Children’s
Low Resource
Creation of Center-specific
Twitter and Facebook
Accounts
Resource Intensive
Portion of website with
patient-directed
explanations of
Treatment
Services
Fleisch-Kincaid Revision of
YouTube Informational Videos
Interactive Introductions to
Facility and Staff
Tour
St. Jude’s Children’s Research
Hospital
Comprehensive Treatment of
Pediatric Cancer
Survivorship Care and Support
Radiation Oncology, General
Oncology, and Cancer Prevention
Research
Clinical Trials of Cancer Treatment
Need-blind Accommodation
Fundraising
Target Audience- Parents of
Prospective Patients, Survivors of
Pediatric Cancer
SWOT Analysis
Strengths
Highly publicized
Written resources for
former patients and
parents
Survivorship portion of
website
Strong YouTube, Facebook,
and Twitter presence
Easy to Navigate
Weaknesses
Health Literacy Issue with
media for parents
Lack of age appropriate
educational materials for
patients
Survivorship materials aimed
at adults, not adolescents
Lack of visual appeal
Lack of anecdotal/videobased education on YouTube
SWOT Analysis (cont’d)
Opportunities
Parents and patients eager
to seek and receive
information
Nationally recognized
organization
Strong celebrity
connections
Threats
Inaccurate or misleading
cancer-related websites
Competition from other
cancer-related charities
Emphasis on fundraising
and research
Recommendations for St. Jude’s
Low Resource
Twitter targeting current
patients and families
Resource Intensive
Separate portion of website
targeted at
current/prospective patients
Fleisch-Kincaid revision of
illness descriptions
Patient-perspective YouTube
videos
Survivorship portion directed
at adolescents/young adults
More visual, relevant
Floating Hospital for Children at
Tufts Medical Center
“Promote Health and
Prevent Disease”
Treat Pediatric Cancer
Patients
Long Term Survivorship
Care
Add to Research on More
Effective Treatments and
Forms of Prevention
Target Audience- Parents of
Prospective Patients
SWOT Analysis
Strengths
Visually Appealing Website
Lots of Information for
Parents
Health Literacy
Considerations
Ease of Navigation
Many Specific Descriptions of
Available Family Services
Financial, Educational,
Support
Weaknesses
Lack of Specific YouTube
and Twitter Accounts
Low Video Quality
No Descriptions of Illnesses
Limited Interactive
Components
No Information Aimed at
Patient
SWOT Analysis (cont’d)
Opportunities
Parents and Patients Eager
to Seek and Receive
Information
Newly Implemented Reid R.
Saco AYA Clinic
Recently Received AYA
Website Grant
Threats
More Visible Treatment
Centers
Great Deal of Incorrect of
Misleading Cancer-Related
Information
Recommendations for the
Floating Hospital
Low Resource
Separate Facebook Account
for Cancer Center
Create YouTube Account to
House Existing Videos
Add Explanations of
Diseases in Index
Resource Intensive
Separate Section Speaking
Directly to Children
Outlining Services, What to
Expect
Interactive Component
Separate Survivorship and
Long Term Care Section
Comparison of Organizations
DanaFarber/Boston
Children’s
St. Jude’s
Floating
Hospital
Health Literacy
Clear written
descriptions of
services, but
complex video
explanations of
illnesses
Medical jargon
used
-Circular
glossary
Description of
services and
treatment
process easy to
understand and
process
Education of
Parents
Website
targeted at
parents
-Description of
illnesses and
services
Website
targeted at
parents
-Descriptions of
illnesses
-Emphasis on
financial
Parts of website
targeted at
parents
-Description of
services
-Emphasis on
financial
-YouTube Video
Comparison of Organizations (cont’d)
DanaFarber/Boston
Children’s
St. Jude’s
Floating
Hospital
Social Media
(Twitter,
Facebook)
No distinct
account
Emphasis on
fundraising over
education
No distinct
account
Education of
Children
“Your Child”
Explanations
Survivorship
guide aimed at
adults
“Your Child”
Explanations
Interactive
Components
Social Media and Limited to
Thriving blog
Social Media
Limited to
Social Media
Ease of
Navigation
Low
Strong
Strong
Thank You!
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