Economics Studies Program, Center on Social Dynamics and Policy, The Brookings Institution, Washington, DC, USA.
Public Health, Brown School, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Child Obes. 2023 Mar;19(2):130-138. doi: 10.1089/chi.2021.0264. Epub 2022 May 24.
Whole-of-community interventions are a promising systems-based approach to childhood obesity prevention. A theorized driver of success is "Stakeholder-Driven Community Diffusion" (SDCD): the spread of knowledge about and engagement with obesity prevention efforts from a committee of stakeholder representatives. We focus on the potential of SDCD to affect the broader community. We use an agent-based model of SDCD to dynamically represent the interpersonal interactions that drive community diffusion of knowledge and engagement. We test its explanatory power using longitudinal data from a sample of community members and then use simulations to extrapolate from this limited sample to the unobserved community at large. We also consider counterfactual scenarios that show how changes in implementation strategy might have led to different patterns of community change. Our model can reproduce real-world patterns of diffusion. Simulations show a substantial increase in knowledge (an approximate doubling) and a slight increase in engagement throughout the broader community. A relatively small amount of this change in knowledge (∼10%), and all the change in engagement is attributable to direct intervention effects on committee members. SDCD is premised on creating preconditions for sustainable change. Previous work has estimated impact on small samples closely linked to the stakeholder committee, but the degree to which this translates into the much broader diffusion envisioned by SDCD theory is unknown. This analysis demonstrates the potential of interventions to do just that. Additionally, the counterfactual scenarios suggest that simulation can help tailor implementation of SDCD interventions to increase impact.
全社区干预措施是一种有前途的基于系统的儿童肥胖预防方法。成功的一个理论驱动因素是“利益相关者驱动的社区扩散”(SDCD):从利益相关者代表委员会传播有关肥胖预防工作的知识并参与其中。我们专注于 SDCD 对更广泛社区的潜在影响。我们使用 SDCD 的基于代理的模型来动态表示推动知识和参与社区扩散的人际互动。我们使用来自社区成员样本的纵向数据来测试其解释力,然后使用模拟从这个有限的样本推断到未观察到的整个社区。我们还考虑了反事实情景,以展示实施策略的变化如何导致社区变化的不同模式。我们的模型可以再现现实世界的扩散模式。模拟显示,整个更广泛的社区的知识(大约增加一倍)和参与度都有大幅增加。知识的这种变化只有一小部分(约 10%),而所有参与度的变化都归因于对委员会成员的直接干预效果。SDCD 基于为可持续变革创造前提条件。以前的工作已经对与利益相关者委员会密切相关的小样本进行了影响估计,但这在多大程度上转化为 SDCD 理论所设想的更广泛的扩散尚不清楚。这项分析表明了干预措施可以实现这一目标的潜力。此外,反事实情景表明,模拟可以帮助调整 SDCD 干预措施的实施,以提高影响力。