Barriers and Facilitators to the Uptake of Online and Telephone Services Targeting Health Risk Behaviours among Vocational Education Students: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Participants and Recruitment
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Measures
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Facilitators to Uptake of Online Support Services
3.1.1. Capability-Related Facilitators
Desire to Try or Learn Something New
“I am more than happy to access the information and I am sure I would learn something different from online activities.”(Female)
“If I can learn something then definitely, I can sign up to that one.”(Male)
“Well, I have already started the changes in my life and I have seen improvements so it can only get better if you access other information as well.”(Female)
Online Support Complements Telephone Support
“I think they both actually complement each other, the online and the telephone. I feel like the online stuff backs up the telephone stuff.”(Female)
“It’s just because the phone call for the fruit and vegetable will probably be like I said one-off or at least periodically, so I don’t feel like I’m choked. Then the online is already ongoing and I can access it when I can. So, yeah.”(Male)
3.1.2. Opportunity-Related Facilitators
Easily Accessible and Convenient/Flexible
“Because, first of all, it’s accessible and anywhere and everywhere.”(Male).
“I think, yeah, if I was to be offered any, then maybe the online, I think it’s probably a bit more convenient online to be able to do it at my own time. So yeah, if I had to choose one, then that is what that would be.”(Male)
“Yes, because at least I can access it any time. It’s more convenient.”(Female)
Additional Support to Change
“I think it is just giving you that support that you need, the offer of support to help you if do tend to slip back into old habits or bad habits or that type of thing.”(Female)
“Yeah, I think it’s more about eating habit, because I think I have a problem with that. If I do have to have a program like that telling me that – how much vegetables and fruit I need to consume in a day, it’s like a reminder for me.”(Female)
Cost-Free to Use and Acceptable Duration
“I think it would depend on how long it takes and whether there is a cost involved.”(Female)
“Yes, of course, but I think, well, to be honest, anything free of charge, I definitely will sign up for it.”(Female)
“Of course, I will if it’s free. I’m not ready to pay for online.”(Female)
3.1.3. Motivation-related facilitators
Motivation to Change Health Risk Behaviours
“I think that would really motivate me through that, otherwise it is really hard to get the motivation to do it alone.”(Female)
“…. but for me as I told you that I don’t really get motivated to change my behaviours for physical activities and eating healthy foods. If I start following the program, I would end up following it for a long time until I get the results so it would really motivate me to get healthy.”(Female)
3.2. Facilitators to Uptake of Telephone Support Services
3.2.1. Capability-Related Facilitators
Telephone Support Complements Online Support
“Well, I’d do online first…but if I don’t understand something in the online, I can always use the telephone service and get information by speaking. Because sometimes when you speak to people the information is different from just reading the information, Yeah, so sometimes speaking to a person physically or on the telephone because you can hear someone’s voice, it makes a difference.”(Female)
“Probably use the online program, check out different exercises and all that. Then probably use the telephone program as a way of keeping track of it all.”(Male)
3.2.2. Opportunity-Related Facilitators
Prefer to Talk to Support Provider
“…because verbal communication, in regard to meals, works best for me. For physical activity, because I can’t really keep track, right. But I think use telephone for just conversation in regards to maybe an effect of a particular strenuous physical activity…But with fruit and vegetables, if someone advises, someone helps you break it down, it’s easier verbally than online.”(Male)
“Again, it’s speaking to somebody. If you feel that it isn’t working as well as you would like it to work, being able to talk to the person about changes that may significantly help and that’s where I think support services are good. Giving you clarification on different foods or different exercises and so forth.”(Female)
“Yeah, you’d actually be talking to a real person as opposed to just online website kind of thing so I guess it’d feel more personal and engaging so I’d probably go for that.”(Male)
3.3. Barriers to Uptake of Online Support Services
3.3.1. Opportunity-Related Barriers
Preference for Face-to-Face or Verbal Communication
“For me I found myself trying to engage in those things but certainly I need that face-to-face interaction with people. For me, I think and many of the people that I have talked to, an online service wouldn’t work because they need to have a physical body that they’re actually having a face-to-face interaction with and getting feedback from.”(Female)
“I’d probably be more inclined to be face-to-face with someone, rather than receiving online support. That is when it comes to personal things like that, I guess, yeah, and talking to someone that I trust.”(Male)
Lack of Time
3.3.2. Motivation-Related Barriers
Do Not Want to Change SNAP Risk Behaviours
“I don’t need to. I don’t want to because I don’t have a problem, not a big problem I don’t need help in all that.”(Female)
“Yeah, I see how it’s really useful for some people but I don’t really think I have a problem with too much alcohol consumption so I probably wouldn’t end up using it.”(Male)
Able to Change SNAP Risk Behaviours Themselves
“Yes, I don’t believe I need that additional support. I believe that I am quite capable of doing it myself. I have the ability to change. I sound like a typical alcoholic, don’t I? I have the ability to change my own behaviours.”(Female)
“No, but I don’t really need help for that. I can do it by myself.”(Female)
“Probably not, because I know about what is right to eat, sort of things of what you should be eating. I don’t think I need somebody else to tell me about that. Yeah, it is pretty basic.”(Female)
3.4. Barriers to Uptake of Telephone Support Services
3.4.1. Capability-Related Barriers
Difficulty Understanding Accent or Language
“It’s really hard for me to communicate through the phone…you don’t really understand what people are talking about…Language is really restrictive.”(Female)
“You know, trying to get information and you can’t understand what a person is saying. So terrible. You know?”(Female)
3.4.2. Opportunity-Related Barriers
Preference for Face-to-Face Interaction
“To be honest, I wouldn’t sign up because, personally, I don’t like to have this phone call. I like to have more face-to-face interaction, because phone calls, I don’t think it work for me. It’s really hard for me to communicate through the phone… sometimes you have to look at the person facial expression to tell exactly what they mean, and the tone and the voices as well.”(Female)
“Yeah. My preference is for face-to-face.”(Female)
“I can’t think what else there is other than face-to-face. Counselling type of services, I guess, where you’re actually accountable and going and speaking with someone for a period of time…Yeah, those sorts of group support services I think are important and face-to-face, having a face-to-face commitment to somebody on a regular basis to discuss where you’re at, yeah.”(Female)
“Oh yeah, face to face. Yeah, that would be good. Because you actually can sort of trust the person, if you get me.”(Male)
“Probably something like meet up or meeting type thing in a way so then I get to meet the teacher or like a leader of the meeting and you can all talk about different things that you can do to try and improve it…I feel like a message from other people would come across to you a lot better than through online or through telephone services.”(Male)
Preference for Apps or Online Programs
“But with the eating healthy and stuff, I think a program will be more suitable, because you just need the information, don’t you? You don’t need the … I think it’s tricky, but they’re two very different struggles. I think the eating one is just more about you getting the information about what you can eat and what’s good and what’s not but for eating and that, I think the program will be fine, where I have no person interaction. It’s just information that I’m taking in and absorbing, that’s fine. So yeah.”(Female)
“I don’t know. A lot of people these days don’t like talking on the phone. It doesn’t worry me. I think an app would be more effective and a lot better for people because-like a lot of people don’t like talking on phones and whatnot these days. It’s weird but, yeah, a lot of people prefer to use an app. Even with work we see it. A lot of people just because we’ve got an online booking system that instead of ringing up they’ll just use the online booking. Yeah, I think-yeah, an app would probably be more efficient.”(Male)
“Yeah, because with the online one I will just have to follow the tutorials or whatever they are telling me to do. I just would have to follow that. But with the telephone one I think have to give them feedback because I’d be talking to them which I won’t really be comfortable with.”(Female)
“Online it is, because you can do it anytime. You can do it on flexible time. So for a telephone you would need to have some set time.”(Male)
Lack of Time
“Yeah, because of the timing. Because every little time I have, I want to channel it to something, not making calls.”(Female)
“Also, with the telephone services there would be a particular time to talk to them and to provide feedback of what I am doing and all that. I’m not really particular in following the time, timetables and all that stuff.”(Female)
3.4.3. Motivation-Related Barriers
Do Not Want to Change SNAP Risk Behaviours
“I guess I don’t feel like I’m at a stage where it’s really, really bad and I do need help.”(Male)
“At the moment, I don’t really think I have a problem.”(Male)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Atorkey, P.; Paul, C.; Wiggers, J.; Bonevski, B.; Mitchell, A.; Tzelepis, F. Barriers and Facilitators to the Uptake of Online and Telephone Services Targeting Health Risk Behaviours among Vocational Education Students: A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 9336. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18179336
Atorkey P, Paul C, Wiggers J, Bonevski B, Mitchell A, Tzelepis F. Barriers and Facilitators to the Uptake of Online and Telephone Services Targeting Health Risk Behaviours among Vocational Education Students: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(17):9336. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18179336
Chicago/Turabian StyleAtorkey, Prince, Christine Paul, John Wiggers, Billie Bonevski, Aimee Mitchell, and Flora Tzelepis. 2021. "Barriers and Facilitators to the Uptake of Online and Telephone Services Targeting Health Risk Behaviours among Vocational Education Students: A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 17: 9336. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18179336
APA StyleAtorkey, P., Paul, C., Wiggers, J., Bonevski, B., Mitchell, A., & Tzelepis, F. (2021). Barriers and Facilitators to the Uptake of Online and Telephone Services Targeting Health Risk Behaviours among Vocational Education Students: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(17), 9336. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18179336