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Related Experiment Video

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Needs and Challenges Related to Multilevel Interventions: Physical Activity Examples.

James F Sallis1,2

  • 11 University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA.

Health Education & Behavior : the Official Publication of the Society for Public Health Education
|August 21, 2018
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Multilevel health interventions targeting individual and environmental factors are crucial for public health. Despite challenges in implementation and evaluation, these complex interventions show feasibility and effectiveness.

Keywords:
ecological modelexercisehealth behaviorhealth educationhealth promotioninterventionnatural experimentquasi-experimental

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Area of Science:

  • Public Health
  • Health Behavior Change
  • Intervention Science

Background:

  • Ecological models and expert recommendations support multilevel health interventions.
  • Evidence indicates the need for interventions addressing multiple levels of influence for population health improvement.
  • Multilevel interventions are under-utilized and under-researched despite their potential.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To discuss the necessity of conceptualizing, implementing, and evaluating multilevel health behavior change interventions.
  • To highlight the feasibility and effectiveness of multilevel interventions using physical activity examples.
  • To identify and address the challenges associated with multilevel intervention research and practice.

Main Methods:

  • Summarizing evidence from physical activity interventions.
  • Reviewing challenges in implementation and evaluation of multilevel interventions.
  • Drawing on examples to demonstrate feasibility and effectiveness.

Main Results:

  • Multilevel interventions are feasible and can be effective in improving public health.
  • Significant challenges exist, including team diversity needs, implementation control, timeline unpredictability, and complex team management.
  • There is a need for less-rigorous study designs and methods for evaluating complex interventions.

Conclusions:

  • Multilevel health behavior change interventions are essential for population health.
  • Addressing implementation and evaluation challenges is critical for advancing the field.
  • Recommendations for training, funding, and academic incentives are needed to promote more and better multilevel interventions.