Behavioral epidemiology: a systematic framework to classify phases of research on health promotion and disease prevention.

Ann Behav Med

Department of Psychology, San Diego State University, 6363 Alvarado Court, #103, San Diego, CA 92120, USA.

Published: July 2001

AI Article Synopsis

  • The concept of "behavioral epidemiology" has been ambiguously defined since the late 1970s, prompting a framework for systematic studies on health-related behaviors to inform effective interventions for populations.
  • The proposed framework consists of five phases: linking behaviors to health, measuring behaviors, identifying influences, evaluating interventions, and implementing research into practice.
  • An analysis of recent studies across four health journals revealed that while many studies focused on identifying influences on behaviors, there was a deficit in measuring behaviors and evaluating interventions, with only one journal showing significant research on translating findings into practice.

Article Abstract

Although the term "behavioral epidemiology" has been used in the literature since the late 1970s, it has not been clearly defined. A behavioral epidemiology framework is proposed to specify a systematic sequence of studies on health-related behaviors, leading to evidence-based interventions directed at populations. The phase are: 1--establish links between behaviors and health; 2--develop measures of the behavior; 3--identify influences on the behavior; 4--evaluate interventions to change the behavior; 5--translate research into practice. Mature research areas are expected to have more studies in the latter phases. Recent volumes of four journals (Annals of Behavioral Medicine, Health Psychology, Journal of Nutrition Education, Tobacco Control) were audited, and empirical studies were classified into these phases. Phase 3 studies were common (identifying influences on behaviors; 27% to 50%), and Phase 2 studies were least common (measurement; 0% to 15%). Annals of Behavioral Medicine and Health Psychology were low on Phase 4 (intervention studies; 9% and 11%, respectively). The Journal of Nutrition Education was the only journal reviewed that had a substantial number (20%) of Phase 5 studies (translating research into practice). The behavioral epidemiology framework can be used to evaluate the status of research on health behaviors and to guide research policies.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF02895665DOI Listing

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