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Integrating complex systems methods to advance obesity prevention intervention research

journal contribution
posted on 2020-04-01, 00:00 authored by E Hennessy, C D Economos, R A Hammond, L B Sweeney, L Brukilacchio, V R Chomitz, J Collins, E Nahar, N Rioles, Steven AllenderSteven Allender, Boyd Swinburn, M W Gillman, P Hovmand, M Kasman, Melanie NicholsMelanie Nichols
Background. Whole-of-community interventions have been recommended and show promise for preventing obesity; however, research to understand the mechanisms underlying their success or failure is lacking. Complex systems approaches may be useful to address this gap. Purpose. To describe the evolution and utilization of qualitative and quantitative complex systems methods to understand and model whole-of-community obesity prevention interventions. Approach. We illustrate the retrospective qualitative development of a systems map representing community change dynamic within the Shape Up Somerville (SUS) intervention. We then describe how this systems map, and complementary work of other successful obesity prevention interventions (Romp & Chomp intervention), informed the COMPACT (childhood obesity modeling for prevention and community transformation) study. COMPACT’s design aligns complex systems science principles and community-engaged research to better understand stakeholders’ leadership roles in whole-of-community interventions. We provide an overview of the complex systems tools used in COMPACT: agent-based modeling, group model building, and social network analysis and describe how whole-of-community intervention stakeholders (“agents”) use their social networks to diffuse knowledge about and engagement with childhood obesity prevention efforts, laying the groundwork for community readiness for sustainable change. Conclusion. Complex systems approaches appear feasible and useful to study whole-of-community obesity prevention interventions and provide novel insights that expand on those gained from traditional approaches. Use of multiple methods, both qualitative and quantitative, from the complex systems toolkit working together can be important to success.

History

Journal

Health education and behavior

Volume

47

Issue

2

Pagination

213 - 223

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Location

Thousand Oaks, Calif.

ISSN

1090-1981

eISSN

1552-6127

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal