Exploring co-adaptation for public health interventions : insights from a rapid review and interviews
- Author
- Janneke de Boer (UGent) , Giuliana Raffaella Longworth, Lea Delfmann (UGent) , Laura Shanna Belmon, Mira Vogelsang, Oritseweyinmi Erikowa-Orighoye, Qingfan An, Benedicte Deforche (UGent) , Greet Cardon (UGent) , Maïté Verloigne (UGent) , Teatske Altenburg and Maria Giné-Garriga
- Organization
- Project
- Abstract
- Background Adapting co-creation research processes and/or public health interventions improves the fit between the intervention and population of interest, potentially resulting in more relevant and effective interventions. Mode 2 research approaches (e.g., co-creation, co-production, co-design, community-based participatory research, and participatory action research) can ensure that adaptations fit the socio-cultural and economic contexts. However, an overview of existing practices and how to co-adapt is lacking. This study aimed to provide an overview of the use of co-adaptation in co-creation processes and/or public health interventions. Methods We conducted a rapid review search on the Health CASCADE co-creation database. Relevant peer-reviewed studies reporting on co-adaptation of public health interventions were identified. A call for case studies via social media and co-authors’ snowballing was issued to perform interviews with co-creation researchers gaining insights into how co-adaptation was applied from unpublished studies and practice. Interviews were analysed using template analysis. Results Fourteen studies addressed various public health issues by co-adapting co-creation processes, intervention activities, communication platforms, monitoring strategies, training components, and materials’ language and tone. Most studies lacked detailed reporting on the co-adaptation process, though some provided information on group composition and number, duration, and methods applied. Two out of 14 studies used a framework (i.e., Intervention Mapping Adapt), seven described their adaptation procedure without naming a specific framework, and five did not report any procedures or frameworks. Five of seven case studies used adaptation frameworks (e.g., ADAPT guidance). Interviews provided insights into the co-adaptation process emphasising the importance of contextual fit, integrating prior knowledge, and logging adaptations. Conclusions This study is the first introducing the concept of and exploring co-adaptation of co-creation processes and/or public health interventions. It provides details regarding adaptations made, whether and which frameworks were used, and procedures applied to adapt. The findings highlight the need for tailored frameworks for co-adaptation and better reporting of co-adaptation processes.
- Keywords
- Co-creation, Health promotion, Implementation, Modification, Guidelines, PREVENTION, IMPLEMENTATION, TRANSLATION, CURRICULUM, KNOWLEDGE, EDUCATION, SCIENCE, MODEL
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-01JMHCQ7F5F90JR9MJ28QYVSTZ
- MLA
- de Boer, Janneke, et al. “Exploring Co-Adaptation for Public Health Interventions : Insights from a Rapid Review and Interviews.” BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, vol. 25, no. 1, 2025, doi:10.1186/s12889-025-21544-7.
- APA
- de Boer, J., Longworth, G. R., Delfmann, L., Belmon, L. S., Vogelsang, M., Erikowa-Orighoye, O., … Giné-Garriga, M. (2025). Exploring co-adaptation for public health interventions : insights from a rapid review and interviews. BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 25(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-21544-7
- Chicago author-date
- Boer, Janneke de, Giuliana Raffaella Longworth, Lea Delfmann, Laura Shanna Belmon, Mira Vogelsang, Oritseweyinmi Erikowa-Orighoye, Qingfan An, et al. 2025. “Exploring Co-Adaptation for Public Health Interventions : Insights from a Rapid Review and Interviews.” BMC PUBLIC HEALTH 25 (1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-21544-7.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- de Boer, Janneke, Giuliana Raffaella Longworth, Lea Delfmann, Laura Shanna Belmon, Mira Vogelsang, Oritseweyinmi Erikowa-Orighoye, Qingfan An, Benedicte Deforche, Greet Cardon, Maïté Verloigne, Teatske Altenburg, and Maria Giné-Garriga. 2025. “Exploring Co-Adaptation for Public Health Interventions : Insights from a Rapid Review and Interviews.” BMC PUBLIC HEALTH 25 (1). doi:10.1186/s12889-025-21544-7.
- Vancouver
- 1.de Boer J, Longworth GR, Delfmann L, Belmon LS, Vogelsang M, Erikowa-Orighoye O, et al. Exploring co-adaptation for public health interventions : insights from a rapid review and interviews. BMC PUBLIC HEALTH. 2025;25(1).
- IEEE
- [1]J. de Boer et al., “Exploring co-adaptation for public health interventions : insights from a rapid review and interviews,” BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, vol. 25, no. 1, 2025.
@article{01JMHCQ7F5F90JR9MJ28QYVSTZ,
abstract = {{Background
Adapting co-creation research processes and/or public health interventions improves the fit between the intervention and population of interest, potentially resulting in more relevant and effective interventions. Mode 2 research approaches (e.g., co-creation, co-production, co-design, community-based participatory research, and participatory action research) can ensure that adaptations fit the socio-cultural and economic contexts. However, an overview of existing practices and how to co-adapt is lacking. This study aimed to provide an overview of the use of co-adaptation in co-creation processes and/or public health interventions.
Methods
We conducted a rapid review search on the Health CASCADE co-creation database. Relevant peer-reviewed studies reporting on co-adaptation of public health interventions were identified. A call for case studies via social media and co-authors’ snowballing was issued to perform interviews with co-creation researchers gaining insights into how co-adaptation was applied from unpublished studies and practice. Interviews were analysed using template analysis.
Results
Fourteen studies addressed various public health issues by co-adapting co-creation processes, intervention activities, communication platforms, monitoring strategies, training components, and materials’ language and tone. Most studies lacked detailed reporting on the co-adaptation process, though some provided information on group composition and number, duration, and methods applied. Two out of 14 studies used a framework (i.e., Intervention Mapping Adapt), seven described their adaptation procedure without naming a specific framework, and five did not report any procedures or frameworks. Five of seven case studies used adaptation frameworks (e.g., ADAPT guidance). Interviews provided insights into the co-adaptation process emphasising the importance of contextual fit, integrating prior knowledge, and logging adaptations.
Conclusions
This study is the first introducing the concept of and exploring co-adaptation of co-creation processes and/or public health interventions. It provides details regarding adaptations made, whether and which frameworks were used, and procedures applied to adapt. The findings highlight the need for tailored frameworks for co-adaptation and better reporting of co-adaptation processes.}},
articleno = {{614}},
author = {{de Boer, Janneke and Longworth, Giuliana Raffaella and Delfmann, Lea and Belmon, Laura Shanna and Vogelsang, Mira and Erikowa-Orighoye, Oritseweyinmi and An, Qingfan and Deforche, Benedicte and Cardon, Greet and Verloigne, Maïté and Altenburg, Teatske and Giné-Garriga, Maria}},
issn = {{1471-2458}},
journal = {{BMC PUBLIC HEALTH}},
keywords = {{Co-creation,Health promotion,Implementation,Modification,Guidelines,PREVENTION,IMPLEMENTATION,TRANSLATION,CURRICULUM,KNOWLEDGE,EDUCATION,SCIENCE,MODEL}},
language = {{eng}},
number = {{1}},
pages = {{21}},
title = {{Exploring co-adaptation for public health interventions : insights from a rapid review and interviews}},
url = {{http://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-21544-7}},
volume = {{25}},
year = {{2025}},
}
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