“We Don’t Assume That Everyone Has the Same Idea About Health, Do We?” Explorative Study of Citizens’ Perceptions of Health and Participation to Improve Their Health in a Low Socioeconomic City District
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Setting
2.2. Study Design
2.3. Participants: Recruitment and Response
2.4. Ethical Approval
2.5. Procedure: Concept Mapping
2.6. Overall Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Perceptions of Health
3.2. Needs and Barriers to Improving Health
3.3. Actions to Improve Health
- The language group and the yoga group participants went swimming;
- Two people got a biking buddy;
- Some language group participants took guitar lessons;
- The resident group participants made appointments to meet more regularly;
- One group organized a high tea to meet (new) neighbors.
4. Discussion
4.1. Health is a Multidimensional Concept
4.2. Perceptions on Health and the Social and Natural Environment as Important Assets
4.3. Citizens and Professionals Working Together to Build a Health Promotion Programme
4.4. Methodological Considerations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Name | Participants Total Session * 1 2 | Sex | Mean Age | Ethnic Background | Occupational Status | Educational Status | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Adolescents’ group AG | 11 | 11 | - ** | Male: 5 Female: 6 | 17 (14–30) | Dutch: 11 | Student: 10 Employed: 1 | Low: 4 Medium: 5 High: 2 |
2 | Language group LG | 10 | 8 | 7 | Male: 2 Female: 8 | 40 (27–66) | Dutch: 2 Turkish: 4 Syrian: 2 Other: 3 | Employed: 1 Unemployed: 8 Retired: 1 | Low: 6 Medium: 2 High: 2 |
3 | Yoga group YG | 8 | 7 | 5 | Male: 0 Female: 8 | 71 (57–79) | Dutch: 8 | Employed: 2 Unemployed: 1 Retired: 5 | Low: 4 Medium: 1 High: 3 |
4 | Knitting group KG | 9 | 8 | 9 | Male: 0 Female: 9 | 73 (53–92) | Dutch: 9 | Employed: 3 Retired: 6 | Low: 6 Medium: 1 High: 2 |
5 | Walking group WG | 7 | 7 | 4 | Male: 4 Female: 3 | 69 (64–77) | Dutch: 7 | Unemployed: 1 Retired: 6 | Low: 4 Medium: 1 High: 2 |
6 | Residents’ group A RA | 7 | 6 | 4 | Male: 1 Female: 6 | 61 (22–77) | Dutch: 3 Turkish: 3 Indonesia: 1 | Employed: 1 Unemployed: 2 Retired: 4 | Low: 6 Medium: 1 |
7 | Residents’ group B RB | 10 | 10 | - ** | Male: 3 Female: 7 | 72 (57–82) | Dutch: 10 | Employed: 1 Unemployed: 1 Retired: 8 | Low: 8 High: 2 |
8 | Residents’ group M RM | 8 | 4 | 8 | Male: 5 Female: 3 | 47 (16–69) | Dutch: 8 | Employed: 2 Unemployed: 2 Retired: 2 Student: 2 | Low: 3 Medium: 3 High: 2 |
9 | Volunteers’ community centre VD | 4 | 4 | - ** | Male: 3 Female: 1 | 69 (66–71) | Dutch: 4 | Retired: 4 | Medium: 2 Unknown: 2 |
10 | Volunteers’ play garden VS | 6 | 6 | 6 | Female: 6 | 37 (31–47) | Dutch: 5 East Europe: 1 | Unemployed: 6 | Low: 6 |
11 | Women’s group VC | 9 | 9 | - ** | Male: 1 Female: 8 | 67 (44–87) | Dutch: 8 Polish: 1 | Employed: 4 Unemployed: 1 Retired: 4 | Low: 8 High: 1 |
TOTAL | 89 | Male: 24 Female: 65 | Employed: 15 Unemployed: 22 Retired: 40 Student: 10 | Low: 55 Medium: 16 High: 16 Unknown: 2 |
1. Preparation | Recruiting participants and defining questions and focus of group sessions. | |
First group session ‘What does feeling healthy mean to you?’ | 2. Idea generation | Participants individually wrote words or statements that they associated with health on separate cards. |
3. Structuring the ideas | With all cards collected, the group composed clusters of words/statements that belonged together and assigned a name to each cluster. | |
4. Representation | Participants individually selected the three most important clusters. The rankings resulted in a group rating from 1 (most important) to 10 (least important). | |
Second group session ‘What do you need to retain/improve health?’ | 5. Interpretation | The results of the first focus group session, clusters as well as ranking, were fed back in a second session. Needs and wishes for improving health were inventoried and discussed. |
6. Utilization | Resources, facilitators, barriers, and ideas about health-improving actions were explored. A visual representation of the results of this session was made by a cartoonist. All the results of both sessions were brought together and used as inputs for the VoM health promotion program. |
Perceptions | # Number of Groups Mentioned | Quotes | Actions to Improve Health |
---|---|---|---|
Social relations | 10 | “Relations, I think, are very important, with other people. Has to do with health as well.” (WG) “Look, as soon as one doesn’t have social relations, you are getting lonely and loneliness is bad for your health.” (VD) | Participate in one of the community or activity groups Activities in neighborhood centers |
Physical activity | 10 | “If you keep on moving, you experience; I feel healthy.” (YG) “When I’ve been swimming; I feel relaxed and then afterwards I can pay attention to my child and be fully present.” (VS) | Swimming lessons Biking buddy Walking, yoga, Zumba |
Positive life attitude | 9 | “Just always putting the focus on positive things.” (AG) “Seize the day, that’s what I always say.” (YG) “To stay healthy, you need to think positively about all problems.” (LG) | No specific actions |
Healthy eating | 8 | “Food and eating have different aspects, like enjoying it, but also you simply need it.” (RB) “Healthy eating, making tasty soup and … don’t eat too much.” (LG) | Cooking workshops (adolescents, Turkish women) |
Being in control/empowered | 7 | “That I can decide about what to do and what not.” (YG) “Being able to do everything by yourself; self-dependence.” (RA) | Course “Looking for sense” |
Relaxation/mental rest | 7 | “It’s a way of relaxing and taking time for myself.” (RM) “No duties, everything is allowed, well... everything …. Ha ha.” (LG) | No specific actions |
Natural environment | 6 | “Spending time outside is relaxing, a kind of rest.” (YG) “Being outdoors is a piece of happiness.” (YG) “Fresh air also has something to do with it, with health.” (RB) | No specific actions |
Supportive of Health | Barriers to Improving Health |
---|---|
Social environment, friends “….. because you are in contact, you matter again.” (YG) Doing things together, collaboration, giving and asking for help “… but there are people surrounding you, that care and want to give help.” (RB) “If you get started together, I mean having social interactions with other people, then it becomes easier to accept yourself as well.” (RM) Acceptance, openness about the situation “It does not work, or it works with some extra effort. That doesn’t matter. It’s all part of getting older, I always say.” (RB) Self-confidence, focus on possibilities “It is just that you should better not complain but just hop on your bike and go.” (KG) Character traits like perseverance, courage, being strong, and taking the initiative “With a strong character, one does everything with perseverance and confidence. A strong character is what you need.” (VS) A dog (pat) “With a dog, you get enough physical activity.” (KG) Bike, e-bike “A special low step through bike; very nice and now I can use it more.” (KG) | Cultural aspects “It depends on, I think, the family and culture you grow up with. What the habits are.” (KG) Beliefs, convictions “Your own thoughts can hinder you, you know.” (RB) Physical impediments “I have a lot of physical impediments. Still, I would feel like being the same as before; a very competitive person I am. And because of that, I’ve lost my quality of life.” (RM) “I really find it difficult not to be able to open a jar of marmalade for example.” (RB) (Chronic) Diseases and illness “I only have 50% lung capacity, so I am permanently, when doing something, I am always out of breath.” (RM) Financial aspects, money “A lot of things just cost a lot, for me too. I have four children and I am getting older and it all becomes very expensive.” (VS) Language “Often, things go wrong because of the talking and the language barrier that one has.” (RA) |
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de Jong, M.A.J.G.; Wagemakers, A.; Koelen, M.A. “We Don’t Assume That Everyone Has the Same Idea About Health, Do We?” Explorative Study of Citizens’ Perceptions of Health and Participation to Improve Their Health in a Low Socioeconomic City District. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 4958. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17144958
de Jong MAJG, Wagemakers A, Koelen MA. “We Don’t Assume That Everyone Has the Same Idea About Health, Do We?” Explorative Study of Citizens’ Perceptions of Health and Participation to Improve Their Health in a Low Socioeconomic City District. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(14):4958. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17144958
Chicago/Turabian Stylede Jong, Marja A. J. G., Annemarie Wagemakers, and Maria A. Koelen. 2020. "“We Don’t Assume That Everyone Has the Same Idea About Health, Do We?” Explorative Study of Citizens’ Perceptions of Health and Participation to Improve Their Health in a Low Socioeconomic City District" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 14: 4958. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17144958
APA Stylede Jong, M. A. J. G., Wagemakers, A., & Koelen, M. A. (2020). “We Don’t Assume That Everyone Has the Same Idea About Health, Do We?” Explorative Study of Citizens’ Perceptions of Health and Participation to Improve Their Health in a Low Socioeconomic City District. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(14), 4958. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17144958