A Framework for Culturally Relevant Online Learning: Lessons from Alaska's Tribal Health Workers

J Cancer Educ. 2019 Aug;34(4):647-653. doi: 10.1007/s13187-018-1350-8.

Abstract

Culturally relevant health promotion is an opportunity to reduce health inequities in diseases with modifiable risks, such as cancer. Alaska Native people bear a disproportionate cancer burden, and Alaska's rural tribal health workers consequently requested cancer education accessible online. In response, the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium cancer education team sought to create a framework for culturally relevant online learning to inform the creation of distance-delivered cancer education. Guided by the principles of community-based participatory action research and grounded in empowerment theory, the project team conducted a focus group with 10 Alaska Native education experts, 12 culturally diverse key informant interviews, a key stakeholder survey of 62 Alaska Native tribal health workers and their instructors/supervisors, and a literature review on distance-delivered education with Alaska Native or American Indian people. Qualitative findings were analyzed in Atlas.ti, with common themes presented in this article as a framework for culturally relevant online education. This proposed framework includes four principles: collaborative development, interactive content delivery, contextualizing learning, and creating connection. As an Alaskan tribal health worker shared "we're all in this together. All about conversations, relationships. Always learn from you/with you, together what we know and understand from the center of our experience, our ways of knowing, being, caring." The proposed framework has been applied to support cancer education and promote cancer control with Alaska Native people and has motivated health behavior change to reduce cancer risk. This framework may be adaptable to other populations to guide effective and culturally relevant online interventions.

Keywords: Alaska Native; Community health workers; Community-based participatory action research; Health disparities; Health promotion; Online learning; Program planning.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Alaska / epidemiology
  • Community Health Workers / education*
  • Community-Based Participatory Research
  • Cultural Competency*
  • Delivery of Health Care / standards*
  • Education, Distance / methods*
  • Female
  • Focus Groups
  • Health Education*
  • Health Promotion*
  • Humans
  • Indians, North American
  • Information Dissemination
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Neoplasms / epidemiology
  • Neoplasms / prevention & control*
  • Online Systems
  • Rural Population
  • Surveys and Questionnaires
  • Young Adult