Abstract

▪ Abstract This paper examines the results of population-level interventions conducted in three settings: entire communities, worksites, and schools. Four major conclusions are discussed: (a) Directions for the next generation of community-based interventions include targeting multiple levels of influence; addressing social inequalities in disease risk; involving communities in program planning and implementation; incorporating approaches for “tailoring” interventions; and utilizing rigorous process evaluation. (b) In addition to randomized controlled trials, it is time to use the full range of research phases available, from hypothesis generation and methods development to dissemination research. (c) The public health research agenda may have contributed to observed secular trends by placing behavioral risk factors on the social and media agendas. (d) The magnitude of the results of community intervention trials must be judged according to their potential public health or population-level effects. Small changes at the individual level may result in large benefits at the population level.

Keywords

Psychological interventionIntervention (counseling)Public healthPopulationEnvironmental healthPsychologyPublic health interventionsGerontologyMedicineNursing

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Publication Info

Year
1998
Type
review
Volume
19
Issue
1
Pages
379-416
Citations
312
Access
Closed

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Glorian Sorensen, Karen M. Emmons, Mary K. Hunt et al. (1998). IMPLICATIONS OF THE RESULTS OF COMMUNITY INTERVENTION TRIALS. Annual Review of Public Health , 19 (1) , 379-416. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.publhealth.19.1.379

Identifiers

DOI
10.1146/annurev.publhealth.19.1.379