Yale University

Community, culture and sustainability in multilevel dynamic systems intervention science.

TitleCommunity, culture and sustainability in multilevel dynamic systems intervention science.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsSchensul, Jean J.
JournalAmerican journal of community psychology
Volume43
Issue3-4
Pagination241-56
Date Published2009 Jun
ISSN1573-2770
KeywordsCommunity Mental Health Services, Culture, Humans, Mental Disorders, Problem Solving, Residence Characteristics
AbstractThis paper addresses intertwined issues in the conceptualization, implementation and evaluation of multilevel dynamic systems intervention science (MDSIS). Interventions are systematically planned, conducted and evaluated social science-based cultural products intercepting the lives of people and institutions in the context of multiple additional events and processes (which also may be referred to as interventions) that may speed, slow or reduce change towards a desired outcome. Multilevel interventions address change efforts at multiple social levels in the hope that effects at each level will forge synergistic links, facilitating movement toward desired change. This paper utilizes an ecological framework that identifies macro (policy and regulatory institutions), meso (organizations and agencies with resources, and power) and micro (individuals, families and friends living in communities) interacting directly and indirectly. An MDSIS approach hypothesizes that change toward a goal will occur faster and more effectively when synchronized and supported across levels in a social system. MDSIS approaches by definition involve "whole" communities and cannot be implemented without the establishments of working community partnerships This paper takes a dynamic systems approach to science as conducted in communities, and discusses four concepts that are central to MDSIS--science, community, culture, and sustainability. These concepts are important in community based participatory research and to the targeting, refinement, and adaptation of enduring interventions. Consistency in their meaning and use can promote forward movement in the field of MDSIS, and in community-based prevention science.
Alternate JournalAm J Community Psychol

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