Assessing the Impact of De Novo Social Ties within Health Intervention Settings: New Questions for Health Behavior Intervention Research

Eric Tesdahl, Sabina B Gesell, Eric Tesdahl, Sabina B Gesell

Abstract

Recent developments in the study of health and social networks have focused on linkages between health outcomes and naturally occurring social relations, such as friendship or kinship. Based on findings in this area, a new generation of health behavior intervention programs have been implemented that rely on the formation of new social relations among program participants. However, little is known about the qualities of these de novo social relations. We examined the social networks of 59 participants within a randomized controlled trial of an intervention designed to prevent excessive gestational weight gain. We employed exponential random graph modeling techniques to analyze supportive relationships formed between participants in the intervention arm, to detect unique effects of program participation on the likelihood of forming ties. Program participation had a positive effect on the likelihood of forming supportive social relations, however, in this particular timeframe we did not detect any additional effect of such relations on the health behaviors or outcomes of interest. Our findings raise two critical questions: do short-term group-level programs reliably lead to the formation of new social relations among participants; and do these relations have a unique effect on health outcomes relative to standard methods of health behavior intervention?

Keywords: behavior; health intervention; social networks.

© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Network of supportive social ties formed among 59 study participants. Note: Eighteen nodes displayed at the left of the graph depict those participants who formed no new social support ties during the course of the study.
Figure 2
Figure 2
ERG model goodness‐of‐fit diagnostic plots.

Source: PubMed

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