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Journal Article

Citation

Apostolopoulos Y, Lemke MK, Barry AE, Hassmiller Lich K. Addiction 2018; 113(2): 353-362.

Affiliation

Department of Health Policy & Management, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, 1105E McGavran-Greenberg Hall, CB #7411, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599-7411, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/add.13955

PMID

28734094

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The drinking environment is a complex system consisting of a number of heterogeneous, evolving, and interacting components, which exhibit circular causality and emergent properties. These characteristics reduce the efficacy of commonly used research approaches, which typically do not account for the underlying dynamic complexity of alcohol consumption and the interdependent nature of diverse factors influencing misuse over time. We use alcohol misuse among college students in the United States as an example for framing our argument for a complex systems paradigm.

METHODS: A complex systems paradigm, grounded in socioecological and complex systems theories and computational modeling and simulation, is introduced. Theoretical, conceptual, methodological, and analytical underpinnings of this paradigm are described in the context of college drinking prevention research.

RESULTS: The proposed complex systems paradigm can transcend limitations of traditional approaches, thereby fostering new directions in alcohol prevention research. By conceptualizing student alcohol misuse as a complex adaptive system, computational modeling and simulation methodologies and analytical techniques can be used. Moreover, use of participatory model-building approaches to generate simulation models, can further increase stakeholder buy-in, understanding, and policymaking.

CONCLUSIONS: A complex systems paradigm for research into alcohol misuse can provide a holistic understanding of the underlying drinking environment and its long-term trajectory, which can elucidate high-leverage preventive interventions.

This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Language: en

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