Apr 17, 2024 (2000 UTC). Webinar SIG Socio-economic Inequalities: Explaining differential socioeconomic effects in population health interventions: Development and Application of the Depth tool for classifying intervention agentic demand

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Title:

Explaining differential socioeconomic effects in population health interventions: Development and Application of the Depth tool for classifying intervention agentic demand

Video

When

April 17, 2024, 2000 UTC

Who:

Speakers:

Kate Garrott, MRC Epidemiology Unit, University of Cambridge.

Jean Adams, MRC Epidemiology Unit, University of Cambridge.

Moderators:

Lene Seider, University of Sydney

Abstract

Background

The ‘agentic demand’ of population health interventions (PHIs) may influence how interventions work. ‘Highly agentic’ interventions (e.g. information campaigns) rely on recipients noticing and responding to the intervention in order to benefit. Conversely ‘less agentic’ interventions (e.g. food reformulation) require little action from recipients. The resources required for individuals to benefit from highly agentic interventions are socio-economically patterned, thus agentic demand may influence intervention effectiveness and equity. Systematic evidence exploring these associations is lacking due to the absence of adequate tools to classify agentic demands. We aimed to develop such a tool and test its application.

Methods

For tool development, we used an iterative approach involving five components: (1) systematic identification of diet and physical activity PHIs. We searched nine databases (MEDLINE, EMBASE, Science Citation Index, CINAHL, Transport Research International Database, Social Science Citation Index, PyschInfo, ASSIA and IBSS from 01 January 2010 to 17 August 2020. We used search terms on dietary and physical activity outcomes AND Systematic reviews AND Health interventions, adapted for each database; (2) coding of intervention actors and actions; (3) data synthesis; (4) expert qualitative feedback; and (5) reliability assessment. We applied the final tool in a ‘proof of concept’ review, extracting studies from three existing equity focused systematic reviews. We applied the tool, extracted data on overall intervention effect and differential socio-economic effects and visualised findings.

Findings

We identified three concepts influencing agentic demands of intervention components – exposure (how recipients encounter the intervention), mechanism of action, and engagement (how recipients respond to the intervention) and combined these to form 20 categories. In the review, we applied the tool to 26 PHIs that included 163 components. Intervention components were concentrated in a small number of categories and their categorisation was related to intervention equity but not effectiveness.

Interpretation

We present a novel tool to classify the agentic demand of PHIs and demonstrate its feasibility within a systematic review. Applying this tool within future research, policy and practice to design, select, evaluate and synthesise evidence from PHIs has the potential to advance our understanding of how interventions work and their effect on socioeconomic inequalities.