Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

ParentCoach: co-designing a chatbot to support first-time parents

Recent advancements in chatbot technology have led to their widespread application across various sectors worldwide. Still, significant challenges remain in their effective design and implementation for healthcare in the diverse, multilingual socio-economic contexts in South Africa. These challenges...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Meoli, Leina
Other Authors: Densmore, Melissa
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Eng
Published: Department of Computer Science 2025
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613150461820929
access_status_str Open Access
author Meoli, Leina
author2 Densmore, Melissa
author_browse Densmore, Melissa
Meoli, Leina
author_facet Densmore, Melissa
Meoli, Leina
author_sort Meoli, Leina
collection Thesis
description Recent advancements in chatbot technology have led to their widespread application across various sectors worldwide. Still, significant challenges remain in their effective design and implementation for healthcare in the diverse, multilingual socio-economic contexts in South Africa. These challenges include limited internet connectivity and the need for multilingual support. This dissertation explores the co-design of a chatbot to support first-time parents' informational needs in an urban South African context by drawing on the perspectives of clinicians and parents using an exploratory and co-design approach. I conducted one-on-one interviews with five clinicians to understand their perspectives on parental support needs and exploratory workshops with ten parents to gather insights on their learning challenges and experiences and their informational needs. My analysis of findings emphasizes the importance of designing with empathy to support vulnerable parents, ensuring chatbots complement healthcare professionals, building clinician trust through credible sources and endorsement by reputable healthcare institutions, and enabling repeated access to information to aid parents' information retention. I then conducted two sets of co-design workshops with 21 parents that gave insight into parents' preferences regarding chatbot design modalities and uncovered constraints for our design. These activities underscored the necessity of preparing communities to co-design unfamiliar technologies since most participants were engaging with chatbots for the first time. Despite this unfamiliarity, participants demonstrated an openness to adopt chatbots for parenting support. Some key design contributions from co-design were to supplement multilingual support with English content and integrate simple language with medical terminology to enhance parents' understanding, enable user-initiated chatbot interactions, and offer customizable features for community inclusivity. Though we set out to co-design a chatbot to support first-time parents, I did not end up building one due to various contextual constraints. The prototype is a ``pseudo-chatbot'', a question-andanswer informational resource presented in a chat-like user interface with search and menus for content exploration that we evaluated in a two-week pilot feasibility trial. The results of the trial demonstrated that familiar social messaging interfaces and robust menu designs enhance usability, even without fully interactive chatbot features, and highlighted the importance of aligning chatbot content with parents' priorities to promote engagement.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42476
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:34.243Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Department of Computer Science
publisherStr Department of Computer Science
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42476 ParentCoach: co-designing a chatbot to support first-time parents Meoli, Leina Densmore, Melissa computer science Recent advancements in chatbot technology have led to their widespread application across various sectors worldwide. Still, significant challenges remain in their effective design and implementation for healthcare in the diverse, multilingual socio-economic contexts in South Africa. These challenges include limited internet connectivity and the need for multilingual support. This dissertation explores the co-design of a chatbot to support first-time parents' informational needs in an urban South African context by drawing on the perspectives of clinicians and parents using an exploratory and co-design approach. I conducted one-on-one interviews with five clinicians to understand their perspectives on parental support needs and exploratory workshops with ten parents to gather insights on their learning challenges and experiences and their informational needs. My analysis of findings emphasizes the importance of designing with empathy to support vulnerable parents, ensuring chatbots complement healthcare professionals, building clinician trust through credible sources and endorsement by reputable healthcare institutions, and enabling repeated access to information to aid parents' information retention. I then conducted two sets of co-design workshops with 21 parents that gave insight into parents' preferences regarding chatbot design modalities and uncovered constraints for our design. These activities underscored the necessity of preparing communities to co-design unfamiliar technologies since most participants were engaging with chatbots for the first time. Despite this unfamiliarity, participants demonstrated an openness to adopt chatbots for parenting support. Some key design contributions from co-design were to supplement multilingual support with English content and integrate simple language with medical terminology to enhance parents' understanding, enable user-initiated chatbot interactions, and offer customizable features for community inclusivity. Though we set out to co-design a chatbot to support first-time parents, I did not end up building one due to various contextual constraints. The prototype is a ``pseudo-chatbot'', a question-andanswer informational resource presented in a chat-like user interface with search and menus for content exploration that we evaluated in a two-week pilot feasibility trial. The results of the trial demonstrated that familiar social messaging interfaces and robust menu designs enhance usability, even without fully interactive chatbot features, and highlighted the importance of aligning chatbot content with parents' priorities to promote engagement. 2025-12-22T11:10:15Z 2025-12-22T11:10:15Z 2025 2025-12-22T11:08:03Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42476 en Eng application/pdf Department of Computer Science Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle computer science
Meoli, Leina
ParentCoach: co-designing a chatbot to support first-time parents
thesis_degree_str Master's
title ParentCoach: co-designing a chatbot to support first-time parents
title_full ParentCoach: co-designing a chatbot to support first-time parents
title_fullStr ParentCoach: co-designing a chatbot to support first-time parents
title_full_unstemmed ParentCoach: co-designing a chatbot to support first-time parents
title_short ParentCoach: co-designing a chatbot to support first-time parents
title_sort parentcoach co designing a chatbot to support first time parents
topic computer science
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42476
work_keys_str_mv AT meolileina parentcoachcodesigningachatbottosupportfirsttimeparents