TY - JOUR
T1 - Family Involvement in Asian American Health Interventions
T2 - A Scoping Review and Conceptual Model
AU - Ali, Shahmir H.
AU - Mohsin, Farhan M.
AU - Rouf, Rejowana
AU - Parekh, Ravi
AU - Dhar, Biswadeep
AU - Kaur, Gurket
AU - Parekh, Niyati
AU - Islam, Nadia S.
AU - DiClemente, Ralph J.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Family members play a crucial role in the health of Asian American communities, and their involvement in health interventions can be pivotal in optimizing impact and implementation. To explore how family members can be effectively involved in Asian American health interventions and develop a conceptual framework of methods of involvement at the stages of intervention development, process, and evaluation, this scoping review documented the role of Asian American family members in interventions (across any health objective). Of the 7175 studies identified through database and manual searches, we included 48 studies in the final analysis. Many studies focused on Chinese (54%) or Vietnamese (21%) populations, were conducted in California (44%), and involved spouses (35%) or parents/children (39%). We observed involvement across 3 stages: (1) intervention development (formative research, review process, material development), (2) intervention process (recruitment, receiving the intervention together, receiving a parallel intervention, enlisting support to achieve goals, voluntary intervention support, agent of family-wide change, and participation gatekeepers), and (3) intervention evaluation (received evaluation together, indirect impact evaluation, and feedback during intervention). Impact of family member involvement was both positive (as sources of encouragement, insight, accountability, comfort, and passion) and negative (sources of hindrance, backlash, stigma, obligation, and negative influence). Suggestions for future research interventions include (1) exploring family involvement in South Asian or young adult interventions, (2) diversifying types of family members involved (eg, extended family), and (3) diversifying methods of involvement (eg, family members as implementation agents).
AB - Family members play a crucial role in the health of Asian American communities, and their involvement in health interventions can be pivotal in optimizing impact and implementation. To explore how family members can be effectively involved in Asian American health interventions and develop a conceptual framework of methods of involvement at the stages of intervention development, process, and evaluation, this scoping review documented the role of Asian American family members in interventions (across any health objective). Of the 7175 studies identified through database and manual searches, we included 48 studies in the final analysis. Many studies focused on Chinese (54%) or Vietnamese (21%) populations, were conducted in California (44%), and involved spouses (35%) or parents/children (39%). We observed involvement across 3 stages: (1) intervention development (formative research, review process, material development), (2) intervention process (recruitment, receiving the intervention together, receiving a parallel intervention, enlisting support to achieve goals, voluntary intervention support, agent of family-wide change, and participation gatekeepers), and (3) intervention evaluation (received evaluation together, indirect impact evaluation, and feedback during intervention). Impact of family member involvement was both positive (as sources of encouragement, insight, accountability, comfort, and passion) and negative (sources of hindrance, backlash, stigma, obligation, and negative influence). Suggestions for future research interventions include (1) exploring family involvement in South Asian or young adult interventions, (2) diversifying types of family members involved (eg, extended family), and (3) diversifying methods of involvement (eg, family members as implementation agents).
KW - Asian American
KW - family
KW - intervention
KW - parents
KW - spouses
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85145312069&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85145312069&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/00333549221138851
DO - 10.1177/00333549221138851
M3 - Review article
C2 - 36560878
AN - SCOPUS:85145312069
SN - 0033-3549
JO - Public Health Reports
JF - Public Health Reports
ER -