Schneider Sven, Diehl Katharina, Görig Tatiana, Schilling Laura, De Bock Freia, Hoffmann Kristina, Albrecht Maren, Sonntag Diana, Fischer Joachim
Mannheim Institute for Public Health, Social and Preventive Medicine, Heidelberg University, Ludolf-Krehl-Str. 7-11, D-68167, Mannheim, Germany.
BMC Public Health. 2017 Sep 30;17(1):760. doi: 10.1186/s12889-017-4790-x.
This conceptual paper aims to illustrate the ways in which communities are able to advance health improvements on a population level. Outcome measures may include increased physical activity and healthier eating habits in particular, as well as an improved health-related quality of life and social cohesion as more generic outcomes.
The paper begins by asking initial questions: Why did previous health-specific interventions only show moderate effects on an individual level and mixed effects on a population level? What is the added value of a community-based public health perspective compared to the traditional biomedical perspective when it comes to prevention? Why are we living the way we are living? Why do we eat what we eat? Why do we move the way we move? Subsequently, we illustrate the broad spectrum of contextual interventions available to communities. These can have geographical and technological as well as economic, political, normative and attitude-specific dimensions. It is shown that communities have a strong influence on health-related contexts and decision-making of adults, adolescents and children. In addition contextual characteristics, effects, mediators, moderators and consequences relevant for health can differ greatly between age groups. Both small-scale settings and overarching sectors possess physical, economic, political and sociocultural characteristics that can be proactively influenced by community decision-makers in the sense of a "health in all policies"-strategy.
After presenting various interdisciplinary approaches to community-based health interventions, the manuscript closes with the following core message: Successful community-based health promotion strategies consist of multilevel - multicomponent interventions on the micro, meso and macro-level-environments.
本概念性论文旨在阐述社区能够在人群层面推动健康改善的方式。结果指标可能尤其包括身体活动增加和更健康的饮食习惯,以及作为更一般化结果的与健康相关的生活质量改善和社会凝聚力增强。
论文开篇提出了一些初始问题:为何先前针对特定健康问题的干预措施在个体层面仅显示出中等效果,而在人群层面则呈现出混合效果?在预防方面,与传统生物医学视角相比,基于社区的公共卫生视角的附加价值是什么?我们为何以现在的方式生活?我们为何吃现在所吃的食物?我们为何以现在的方式运动?随后,我们阐述了社区可采用的广泛的情境干预措施。这些措施可以具有地理、技术以及经济、政治、规范和特定态度等维度。研究表明,社区对成年人、青少年和儿童与健康相关的情境及决策有着强大影响。此外,与健康相关的情境特征、效果、调节因素、中介因素和后果在不同年龄组之间可能存在很大差异。小规模环境和总体部门都具备物理、经济、政治和社会文化特征,社区决策者可以从“所有政策皆健康”战略的角度对这些特征进行积极影响。
在介绍了基于社区的健康干预的各种跨学科方法之后,本文以以下核心信息结尾:成功的基于社区的健康促进策略包括在微观、中观和宏观层面环境上进行多层次 - 多组分干预。