Initiatives and partnerships in an Australian metropolitan obesity prevention system: a social network analysis
Abstract Background Limited resources make prevention of complex population-level issues such as obesity increasingly challenging. Collaboration and partnerships between organisations operating in the same system can assist, however, there is a paucity of research into how relationships function at...
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doaj-55d084ca84cd4674bba7de6504e3868a2021-08-15T11:15:54ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582021-08-0121111110.1186/s12889-021-11599-7Initiatives and partnerships in an Australian metropolitan obesity prevention system: a social network analysisKrysten Blackford0Justine E. Leavy1Abbie-Clare Vidler2Dan Chamberlain3Christina Pollard4Therese Riley5Megan Milligan6Jonine Jancey7School of Population Health, Curtin UniversitySchool of Population Health, Curtin UniversitySchool of Population Health, Curtin UniversityCentre for Social Impact, UNSWSchool of Population Health, Curtin UniversityThe Australian Prevention Partnership Centre, Sax InstituteEast Metropolitan Health ServiceSchool of Population Health, Curtin UniversityAbstract Background Limited resources make prevention of complex population-level issues such as obesity increasingly challenging. Collaboration and partnerships between organisations operating in the same system can assist, however, there is a paucity of research into how relationships function at a local level. The aim of this study was to audit initiatives, explore networks, and identify potential opportunities for improving the obesity prevention system in a Health Service area of Western Australia (WA). Methods A mixed-methods study was undertaken in a metropolitan Health Service in Perth, WA in 2019–20. Structured face-to-face interviews (n = 51) were conducted with organisations engaged in obesity prevention, to identify prevention initiatives and their characteristics using a Systems Inventory tool. The Research Team identified the 30 most active organisations during the Systems Inventory, and an online Organisational Network Survey was administered to explore: relationships across six domains; partnership duration; frequency of interaction with other organisations; barriers to implementation; and key contributions to obesity prevention. Descriptive statistics were used to summarise barriers, contributions and Systems Inventory data. Organisational Network Survey data were analysed using social network analysis through UCINET 6 for Windows and Netdraw software. Whole network and cohesion scores were calculated: average degree; density; diameter; and degree centralization. Core-periphery analysis was conducted to identify densely connected core and sparsely connected periphery organisations. Results The Systems Inventory identified 189 unique prevention initiatives, mostly focusing on individual-level behaviour change. Fifty four percent (n = 15) of the Organisational Network Survey respondent organisations and most core organisations (67%, n = 8) were government. The information and knowledge sharing network had a density of 45% indicating a high level of information and knowledge exchange between organisations. The lowest densities were found within the receiving (3.3%), providing (5.5%) and sharing (5.6%) funding networks, suggesting that these formal relationships were the least established. Conclusion Applying a systems thinking lens to local obesity prevention revealed that initiatives conducted focused on individual-level behaviour change and that collaboration and communication between organisations focused on information sharing. Capturing the extent and nature of initiatives and the way partnerships operate to improve obesity prevention can help to identify opportunities to strengthen the networks.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-11599-7Social network analysisObesity preventionHealth promotionSystems thinkingPartnershipsNon-communicable disease |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Krysten Blackford Justine E. Leavy Abbie-Clare Vidler Dan Chamberlain Christina Pollard Therese Riley Megan Milligan Jonine Jancey |
spellingShingle |
Krysten Blackford Justine E. Leavy Abbie-Clare Vidler Dan Chamberlain Christina Pollard Therese Riley Megan Milligan Jonine Jancey Initiatives and partnerships in an Australian metropolitan obesity prevention system: a social network analysis BMC Public Health Social network analysis Obesity prevention Health promotion Systems thinking Partnerships Non-communicable disease |
author_facet |
Krysten Blackford Justine E. Leavy Abbie-Clare Vidler Dan Chamberlain Christina Pollard Therese Riley Megan Milligan Jonine Jancey |
author_sort |
Krysten Blackford |
title |
Initiatives and partnerships in an Australian metropolitan obesity prevention system: a social network analysis |
title_short |
Initiatives and partnerships in an Australian metropolitan obesity prevention system: a social network analysis |
title_full |
Initiatives and partnerships in an Australian metropolitan obesity prevention system: a social network analysis |
title_fullStr |
Initiatives and partnerships in an Australian metropolitan obesity prevention system: a social network analysis |
title_full_unstemmed |
Initiatives and partnerships in an Australian metropolitan obesity prevention system: a social network analysis |
title_sort |
initiatives and partnerships in an australian metropolitan obesity prevention system: a social network analysis |
publisher |
BMC |
series |
BMC Public Health |
issn |
1471-2458 |
publishDate |
2021-08-01 |
description |
Abstract Background Limited resources make prevention of complex population-level issues such as obesity increasingly challenging. Collaboration and partnerships between organisations operating in the same system can assist, however, there is a paucity of research into how relationships function at a local level. The aim of this study was to audit initiatives, explore networks, and identify potential opportunities for improving the obesity prevention system in a Health Service area of Western Australia (WA). Methods A mixed-methods study was undertaken in a metropolitan Health Service in Perth, WA in 2019–20. Structured face-to-face interviews (n = 51) were conducted with organisations engaged in obesity prevention, to identify prevention initiatives and their characteristics using a Systems Inventory tool. The Research Team identified the 30 most active organisations during the Systems Inventory, and an online Organisational Network Survey was administered to explore: relationships across six domains; partnership duration; frequency of interaction with other organisations; barriers to implementation; and key contributions to obesity prevention. Descriptive statistics were used to summarise barriers, contributions and Systems Inventory data. Organisational Network Survey data were analysed using social network analysis through UCINET 6 for Windows and Netdraw software. Whole network and cohesion scores were calculated: average degree; density; diameter; and degree centralization. Core-periphery analysis was conducted to identify densely connected core and sparsely connected periphery organisations. Results The Systems Inventory identified 189 unique prevention initiatives, mostly focusing on individual-level behaviour change. Fifty four percent (n = 15) of the Organisational Network Survey respondent organisations and most core organisations (67%, n = 8) were government. The information and knowledge sharing network had a density of 45% indicating a high level of information and knowledge exchange between organisations. The lowest densities were found within the receiving (3.3%), providing (5.5%) and sharing (5.6%) funding networks, suggesting that these formal relationships were the least established. Conclusion Applying a systems thinking lens to local obesity prevention revealed that initiatives conducted focused on individual-level behaviour change and that collaboration and communication between organisations focused on information sharing. Capturing the extent and nature of initiatives and the way partnerships operate to improve obesity prevention can help to identify opportunities to strengthen the networks. |
topic |
Social network analysis Obesity prevention Health promotion Systems thinking Partnerships Non-communicable disease |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-11599-7 |
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