Conditions for addressing environmental determinants of health behavior in intersectoral policy networks: A fuzzy set Qualitative Comparative Analysis

D. T. J. M. Peters, S. Verweij, K. Greaux, K. Stronks, J. Harting*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Improving health requires changes in the social, physical, economic and political determinants of health behavior. For the realization of policies that address these environmental determinants, intersectoral policy networks are considered necessary for the pooling of resources to implement different policy instruments. However, such network diversity may increase network complexity and therefore hamper network performance. Network complexity may be reduced by network management and the provision of financial resources. This study examined whether network diversity amidst the other conditions is indeed needed to address environmental determinants of health behavior. We included 25 intersectoral policy networks in Dutch municipalities aimed at reducing overweight, smoking, and alcohol/drugs abuse. For our fuzzy set Qualitative Comparative Analysis we used data from three web-based surveys among (a) project leaders regarding network diversity and size (n = 38); (b) project leaders and project partners regarding management (n = 278); and (c) implementation professionals regarding types of environmental determinants addressed (n = 137). Data on budgets were retrieved from project application forms. Contrary to their intentions, most policy networks typically addressed personal determinants. If the environment was addressed too, it was mostly the social environment. To address environmental determinants of health behavior, network diversity (>50% of the actors are non-public health) was necessary in networks that were either small (

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)34-41
Number of pages8
JournalSocial Science & Medicine
Volume195
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2017

Keywords

  • Environmental determinants
  • Health behavior
  • Intersectoral policy networks
  • Network diversity
  • Network size
  • Network management
  • Financial resources
  • Fuzzy set Qualitative Comparative Analysis
  • MANAGEMENT
  • FRAMEWORK

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