(C) PLOS One This story was originally published by PLOS One and is unaltered. . . . . . . . . . . Mi PROTECT: A personalized smartphone platform to report back results to participants of a maternal-child and environmental health research cohort program in Puerto Rico [1] ['Nancy R. Cardona Cordero', 'Department Of Social Sciences', 'School Of Public Health', 'Medical Sciences Campus', 'University Of Puerto Rico', 'San Juan', 'Puerto Rico', 'Irene Lafarga Previdi', 'Center For Collaborative Research In Health Disparities', 'Héctor R. Torres'] Date: 2023-03 Participants provided overwhelmingly positive feedback on the clarity and fluency of presenters in the report-back training. Most participants reported that the mobile phone platform was both accessible and easy to navigate (83% and 80%, respectively) and that images included in the platform facilitated comprehension of the information. Overall, most participants (83%) reported that language, images, and examples in Mi PROTECT strongly represented them as Puerto Ricans. The PROTECT Center is a multi-project initiative that studies the relationship between exposure to environmental contaminants and preterm births during the prenatal and postnatal period among women living in Puerto Rico. PROTECT’s Community Engagement Core and Research Translation Coordinator (CEC/RTC) play a key role in building trust and capacity by approaching the cohort as an engaged community that provides feedback about processes, including how personalized results of their exposure to chemicals should be reported back. The goal of the Mi PROTECT platform was to create a mobile-based application of DERBI (Digital Exposure Report-Back Interface) for our cohort that provides tailored, culturally appropriate information about individual contaminant exposures as well as education on chemical substances and approaches to exposure reduction. The PROTECT Center focuses on studying how contaminants in the environment can affect pregnancy outcomes in women living in the northern Karst of Puerto Rico. In order to facilitate reporting back research results to study participants, the research team decided to develop a mobile based application called Mi PROTECT. Before sharing this application with all study participants, some participants were consulted to ensure that the content was understandable, accessible and culturally appropriate. This was done through in-person meetings where they learned how to navigate the application and revised the content (personal results, definition of contaminants, recommendations to reduce exposure) and provided feedback through an evaluation survey. Results from the survey indicate that participants provided overwhelmingly positive feedback regarding the use of Mi PROTECT. This is an important initiative that demonstrates the relevance of the research right to know and that research participants should be consulted and considered when designing strategies to report back study findings. Funding: This research is supported by grants from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (P42ES017198 to AA & JFC), the Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes (5UH3OD023251 to AA & JFC and 3UH3OD023251-05S1 to NRC) and the collaboration of the Community Engagement Core, a component of the Center for Collaborative Research in Health Disparities, which is funded by an RCMI-Grant from the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (U54 MD007600 to ILP & CMVV). Development of the smartphone DERBI prototype was supported by the NIH Breast Cancer and the Environment Research Program (U01ES026130 to JGB). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. Our aims were (1) to pilot a DERBI interface adapted to our LatinX population and (2) evaluate among PROTECT participants the acceptance, relevancy, and cultural appropriateness of the tool, including avatars, the graphical representation of reported data and the channels to deliver the individual report-back information. Our overall goal was to return results through an innovative, culturally appropriate approach that addresses PROTECT participants’ expectations for report-back. We hypothesize that participants will consider the DERBI Mi PROTECT as a tool that provides easy-to-understand and relevant information that is culturally appropriate. The PROTECT Center was developed with a community-based participatory research framework driven by community-based organizations, including the March of Dimes Foundation and local environmental groups such as Ciudadanos del Karso (Citizens of the Karst), Basura Cero (Zero Waste), Comité Aceitunas y Arenales Unidos por la Salud y el Ambiente (Aceitunas and Arenales Committee United for Health and the Environment), and others. We report on the development and evaluation of a DERBI-adapted tool in a Puerto Rican population of pregnant people residing in a highly polluted area. The PROTECT Center examines the role of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) on adverse reproductive outcomes, particularly preterm births (gestation <37 weeks). Puerto Rico has a history of a high rate of preterm births, reaching nearly 20% in 2008, and also has a high level of contaminated sites with the highest density per square mile of polluted sites in the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) National Priority List ( Fig 2 ). PROTECT’s community engagement approach merges concerns for environmental justice with reproductive health [ 11 ] and the research right-to-know principles described by Morello-Frosch et al. [ 12 ]. Puerto Rico’s history of unethical procedures and methods impacting women’s health [ 13 – 14 ] renders this effort even more compelling. Demonstrating that this tool can be adapted to diverse populations is an urgent need because of the increased burden of pollution among communities of color and low socioeconomic levels. The PROTECT Center, a Superfund Research Program funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), offered a unique opportunity to adapt and evaluate DERBI in a LatinX (Latin American cultural or ethnic identity) population of pregnant people residing in a highly contaminated environmental area with a high burden of adverse reproductive outcomes [ 10 ]. Digital technology is needed to facilitate reporting. The Silent Spring Institute developed the Digital Exposure Report-Back Interface (DERBI) as a digital method that promotes “right-to-know” by allowing the timely sharing of personal exposure results with study participants [ 8 ]. DERBI produces personalized summaries of results and generates graphs of individual results with comparisons to the study group and to benchmarks from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). Participants receive unique ID codes to access their individualized report and have the option of selecting an avatar with their resemblance ( Fig 1 ). The reports include potential sources of chemical exposure, possible related health effects, tactics to reduce exposure and general findings from the project. As such, DERBI has dual potential for advancing the sociological importance of report-back and scientific analysis of multiple exposures while also providing a printed or computer-based and mobile report-back for participants [ 9 ]. There is a growing consensus in the biomedical literature that disclosing research results to study participants is ethical, offers benefits to participants, and can be accomplished without harm [ 1 ]. A report-back strategy provides study participants with the knowledge of potential risks and harms of personal exposures in order to make more informed decisions [ 2 ]. Report-back can be conducted in a variety of modes (i.e., in-person, telephone, mail, web application, smartphone) either individually or in a group/community setting and is a valuable asset to enhance participants’ health literacy and overall engagement, especially when the initiative is culturally-aware. Ramírez-Andreotta and colleagues [ 3 ] found that participants of the Metals Exposure Study in Homes used the information received to change their families’ household behaviors and initiated specific interventions to reduce family exposures. In the Northern California Household Exposure Study, the combination of individual and community report-back engaged participants in a deeper and more collaborative way, thereby giving them an opportunity to analyze their data, exchange ideas on solutions, and take collective action [ 4 ]. Report-back includes approaches that enhance environmental health literacy, encouraging a broad array of science-based practices to develop skills and competencies that promote informed individual choices as well as social and environmental interventions at the community level [ 3 , 5 – 6 ]. The practice of reporting back not only benefits participants but also researchers, as shown in the Household Exposure Study [ 7 ]. Participants whose samples were ready to report back were invited to receive their personal results in a group meeting. Meetings were held at PROTECT’s research facilities in Manatí and the partner Community Health Centers located in Camuy, Ciales and Morovis in Puerto Rico. Our primary goal was to return results through an innovative approach aiming to enhance social support and to gather feedback to understand if Mi PROTECT responded to participants’ interests. During the meetings, analysis of the written content, discussion of the importance of the cultural context and the representation in the images were carried out. At the end of the report-back process, participants were asked to complete two surveys to evaluate the Mi PROTECT platform and the report-back training activity. The Mi PROTECT evaluation form included eight questions about access and navigation within the platform, adequacy of information and images, assessment of image effectiveness, usefulness and understanding of environmental health information and representativeness of the culture. The report-back training activity survey included questions about relevance of the topic for a better quality of life, motivation to continue learning about the topic, helpfulness of received materials for understanding information presented in the Mi PROTECT platform, adequacy of location used, usefulness of Mi PROTECT to know more about chemicals that participants are exposed to, interest in receiving a paper copy of results, and knowledge and clarity of presenters of the following topics: Report-Back Process, My Report of Results and Chemical Substances of concern. Both assessments used a Likert-type scale (i.e., strongly agree, agree, disagree, strongly disagree) for each question [ 18 ]. Assessments also included an open-ended feedback section at the end. Finally, a private WhatsApp group was organized at the request of participants to provide support and exchange information on the Mi PROTECT experience. Participants were provided with an educational session that included an interactive presentation, materials in paper format and a water filter that eliminates most of the concerning chemical substances, including lead, which is not a chemical of interest of the study. As an incentive for participation, PROTECT’s CEC provided activities for the participants’ children in a separate room in the PROTECT facility where they were also educated through environmental health-related games and coloring books ( https://protect.sites.northeastern.edu/resources/recursos/ ). The Mi PROTECT prototype was evaluated by 61 participants who attended the in-person report-back meetings. This subset of pregnant women participated in PROTECT between 2011 and 2017. Table 1 describes characteristics of this group and the PROTECT Cohort. Briefly, participants in the report-back group were between the ages of 18–40 years old with a mean age of 27 (SD 6.8), nearly all of them were married or living with a partner (93%) and most had a family income of less $40,000 (60%). In this subset, 5% (n = 3) had recently experienced a preterm birth and 43% (n = 25) reported that their pregnancy in PROTECT was their first child. Additionally, in this subset, one woman was a PROTECT participant for two pregnancies. These characteristics are similar to those observed in the PROTECT Cohort for age, marital status, income, race and pregnancy outcomes. A subset of women was recruited among former PROTECT participants for this report-back pilot test. Recruitment was based on availability of analyzed samples ready to report back. Participants in this group could be from any project year and municipality of the PROTECT Center and could have participated more than once in the project. Participants had previously signed an IRB-approved one-time consent form that included being contacted via PROTECT’s communication center for participation in future projects and agreed to be provided with their personalized results. To develop the DERBI prototype, we conducted a series of focus groups and key informant interviews with participants and staff from Community Health Centers collaborating with PROTECT, to receive input on knowledge, interest, and preferences about receiving information on the results of their exposure to chemicals [ 9 ]. The team leading the focus groups were members of PROTECT’s Community Engagement Core (CEC), which is composed of public health specialists in education, nursing, social work, qualitative methods, and environmental health. Our multisectoral approach also included PROTECT team members from our Call Center, students (Trainees) and data management personnel. The aim of this initial assessment was to learn about the interest and specific preferences participants had on receiving their individual study results (Phase one) to develop the initial smartphone prototype (Phase two). Findings of the first two phases have been shared elsewhere [ 8 – 9 ]. This manuscript focuses on Phase 3. Fig 4 shows the timeline for development of Report-Back methodologies and implementation. a) General overview of the PROTECT program. b) Menu section with options to access general results and personalized results by substance. c) Brief overview of personalized results and recommendations on how to reduce exposure are shown inside the orange square at the top part of the screen. Detailed information about the selected substance and access to pictures of products that may contain this substance are at the bottom part of the screen. d) Pictures of consumer products that may contain this substance and a close option to return to the previous screen. e) Detailed information about how selected substances may affect your health and legend of graphs that provide results. f) Graph of the three (3) biological samples taken during pregnancy and mean level of this substance in the U.S. population based on NHANES Study. The DERBI platform developed by Silent Spring Institute was adapted for the PROTECT study, within the framework of describing the chemicals that were found, the potential health concerns, what participants could do, health concerns, and overall study results. The adapted tool “Mi PROTECT” (Spanish for “My PROTECT”) includes 1) general introductory information on the PROTECT Center; 2) urine levels of up to six (6) environmental chemicals, by visit; 3) levels of environmental chemicals in household tap water, if collected; 4) recommendations on how to reduce exposure to each chemical found and 5) overall study results summarizing what has been learned from the study as a whole. Chemical results, and associated contextual information about sources and health effects, are divided into groups of related chemicals (Bisphenols, Antibacterials, Parabens, Pesticides, Phthalates, Sunscreen chemicals and CVOCs). Information is specified with text and graphs and includes comparison with both the study population and to similarly aged U.S. women tested in NHANES ( Fig 3 ). Mi PROTECT is bilingual and the participant can choose to use the application in Spanish or English. Participants can navigate the DERBI interface, choosing their own areas of interest, to learn more about contaminant sources, health impacts, exposure reduction strategies, and broader policy approaches. This application was developed for use as a smartphone application because of the limited availability of computers among PROTECT participants and the wide availability of smartphones with internet access [ 17 ]. This study occurs in the PROTECT study area: the Northern Karst region of Puerto Rico that contains 10 of the 22 EPA Superfund hazardous waste sites on the island [ 15 ] (see Fig 2 ). Risk of Superfund contaminants reaching the groundwater (and ultimately tap water) is high in Puerto Rico as many of these sites are unlined landfills that overlie karst aquifers, which are highly permeable pathways for exposure to contamination [ 16 ]. Participants provided feedback on the Mi PROTECT report-back tool itself. As shown in Table 3 , most participants, n = 50 (83%), reported that accessing the platform from mobile phones was “easy” and n = 48 (80%) strongly agreed that it was “easy to navigate.” When evaluating the information provided in the platform, n = 52 (87%) of participants considered that it was relevant, and n = 45 (75%) said that it was easy to understand. Images included in the platform were considered helpful to understanding the information, n = 51 (86%), and n = 57 (96%) reported that the images, examples and language were representative of Puerto Rican culture. In general, most participants, n = 51 (86%), strongly agreed that they will use the PROTECT report-back platform again. Participants also provided recommendations that include: 1) incorporate more avatars and 2) transform the web and mobile platform into a mobile application. Requests from the initial focus group were added to later versions of Mi PROTECT to include additional avatars and images that reference the cultural experience and context of the island. Participants requested that multiple avatars should be created that reflected the variety of hair color and types, eye color and skin tones common in Puerto Rico. Another request was that consumer product images should be changed and include currently available products in local Puerto Rican stores. On the Report-Back Process, Chemical Substances and My Report of Results presentations, participants were positively evaluated for their clarity and fluency; 83% (n = 51), 86% (n = 53) and 86% (n = 53), respectively. To achieve success communicating this information, speakers held internal meetings prior to the Report-Back activity and received feedback from PROTECT employees (nurses, health educators, environmental health specialists, and social workers) who are based in Puerto Rico. Presenters of Chemical Substances and Report of Results demonstrated knowledge of the topic from the participants’ point of view (n = 54, 88%). Most participants, n = 53 (87%), cataloged the Mi PROTECT platform as useful for learning more about potential chemical exposures, and fewer, n = 42 (71%) also asked for a copy of their results in paper format. Participants also provided suggestions for the training activity, including the need for interactive activities for their children while they (i.e., the moms) received the report-back information. Participants provided feedback on how the researchers organized the in-person, group report-back setting. In general, nearly all participants considered that the group report-back process organization was appropriate (n = 59,96%) and characterized the dynamic of the meeting as interesting, n = 58 (95%) ( Table 2 ). The few participants (3% and 4%, respectively) who disagreed with these statements provided suggestions regarding appointment scheduling and meeting organization, which were addressed in subsequent report-back meetings. The vast majority, n = 59 (96%), considered that the report-back process was relevant and will improve their quality of life; about 97% (n = 58) reported that the information received motivated them to continue learning about the topic (i.e., environmental health). Discussion To our knowledge, PROTECT is the first research center in Puerto Rico to report back results of individual biological biomarkers and environmental samples provided by participants. This approach offers a democratic, participatory model that will yield improved science, as has been the case with report-back in a variety of environmental health projects [2–3,7]. We would like to highlight the importance of community engagement during the development of the application; the participants’ input was crucial to considering the cultural context and the incorporation of educational information regarding the chemicals as well as recommendations to reduce exposures. Our results show that the report-back platform was positively received by our participants; most found it easy to navigate and the information useful. In addition, more than half of the participants requested their results in paper format; this may be a focus of future report-back training for PROTECT participants. The report-back training activity, which provided face-to-face interaction and the opportunity for questions and recommendations, was also very well received. This kind of collaboration between researchers and participants can promote environmental health literacy and build trust among research participants. These results draw from the compendium of best practices for reporting back research results to participants, including consulting participants to ensure that the information presented was relevant and culturally appropriate, providing a graphical representation of results in comparison to others in the study, and giving contextual information about contaminants with concrete examples and images. In this way, we have learned to adapt in order to respond to the participants’ objectives and interests by disseminating the findings in a way that they relate to and that makes them feel engaged in the process. One example includes addressing the revisions, changes, and suggestions received, which are shared with our colleagues to be implemented in the Mi PROTECT platform. By adapting these practices to a smartphone report, we were able to further enhance the accessibility of the reports and information. Finally, taking into consideration the socio-cultural context of the participants is very important when developing a report-back strategy. It is important to recognize the strengths and limitations of this approach. We believe this strategy was effective given the active collaboration between researchers and study participants during the development and evaluation of the report-back platform. The participants were not treated as passive subjects, but as individuals with agency whose insights were valued and taken into consideration. Also, digital methods like DERBI reduce practical barriers to report-back and can enable researchers to meet ethical obligations while conducting research, while simultaneously providing participants with the knowledge they need to make informed choices [7,19]. Another advantage of our DERBI Mi PROTECT app is the ability of participants to access their data in a secure digital platform along with the ease of returning to the “reducing exposure” section or other sections, as desired. In contrast, printed results reports can appear lengthy and are less able to link to other digital resources [20]. However, recent extreme weather events on the island such as Hurricane Maria [21–22] influence participants’ need for paper reports, which may explain why many participants asked to receive a copy of their results in paper format. This study did not measure the effect of the report-back platform on environmental health literacy (i.e., pre- and post-test), on behavioral changes to reduce exposures (i.e., follow-up surveys), or on actual exposure measurements (i.e., follow-up biological samples). In other words, we do not know if the reporting back of research results has motivated our participants to make changes in their daily lives or has encouraged them to organize as a community to influence local government. Providing study participants with their results may promote both community engagement and research translation. Many factors could influence the decision of reporting back results in research studies, including the values regarding a participant’s right-to-know, the research team’s perspectives, resources and/or IRB support. According to the Belmont Report principles and community-based participatory research ethics and rights, an informed approach to sharing research results with participants acknowledges their rights and their agency to engage with research findings [7,23]. The 2018 consensus report of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine elaborates on the ethical principles and benefits to both researchers and study participants [1]. Similarly, in the environmental health context, Brody et al. report that both participants and researchers who participated in report-back initiatives have identified benefits, such as increasing trust in science, better retention in cohort studies, improvement of environmental health literacy, individual and community empowerment, and motivation to reduce household exposures [7]. Our data accords with previous studies that have demonstrated that report-back participants felt respected and recognized their contribution to science [4,19,23–24]. These reports are aligned with the advancement and promotion of environmental health justice and literacy, especially in underrepresented communities. Information provided through the report-back process helps the PROTECT community plan, design, and cope with challenging circumstances, which include environmental disasters and disparate exposures to harmful chemicals. This bi-directional communication process has been key to designing culturally appropriate changes in newly designed activities, educational strategies and in research overall. Lessons learned from MI PROTECT Report Back were implemented for the development of the “PROTECT Responde” initiative, whose purpose was to create an educational campaign developed for digital social media to inform participants about possible environmental pollutants and harmful chemicals that can be related to adverse effects in maternal and child health. One of the achievements that we have considered a validation of the work is the trust of the participants, particularly those choosing to have more than one pregnancy within the research project, as well as the participation of the general population in our integrated outreach strategies (social media, radio interviews, among others.) Next steps for PROTECT’s CEC/RTC team include developing training for online telecommunication platforms (e.g., Zoom, Teams, Google Meet) to ensure that participants have the option of attending a virtual group report-back meeting online. However, we intend to continue in-person group meetings, with sensitivity to the reality of COVID-19 or other extenuating circumstances of the individual participants. The Mi PROTECT pilot test informs our transdisciplinary research team, community partners and stakeholders of a new way of promoting research right-to-know for study participants. Women who use the Mi PROTECT report-back platform considered the information relevant and easy to understand, reflecting PROTECT’s transdisciplinary approaches and its unwavering commitment to our engaged cohort. This study shows how translational science approaches become effective in direct benefit to humans and provides evidence on how participants can have an active role during multiple phases of the research development and process. This study pilots a digital health intervention for underrepresented Hispanic LatinX people, a contribution that targets social and environmental justice. Finally, it was imperative that our participants feel represented when they access the Mi PROTECT platform, and this was achieved given that they considered images, examples, and language representative of their Puerto Rican culture. Researchers and future studies should implement report-back methodologies as an intervention tool to promote fair treatment, environmental health justice and scientific literacy. Researchers should incorporate an evaluation of the report-back process to ensure feedback of participants is considered in future endeavors. 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