TY  - INPR
UR  - http://psychology.oxfordre.com/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780190236557.001.0001/acrefore-9780190236557-e-125?rskey=K96UFw&result=1
A1  - Tombor, I
A1  - Michie, SF
N2  - People?s behavior influences health, for example, in the prevention, early detection, and treatment of disease, the management of illness, and the optimization of healthcare professionals? behaviors. Behaviors are part of a system of behaviors within and between people in that any one behavior is influenced by others. Methods for changing behavior may be aimed at individuals, organizations, communities, and/or populations and at changing different influences on behavior, e.g., motivation, capability, and the environment. A framework that encapsulates these influences is the Behavior Change Wheel, which links an understanding of behavior in its context with methods to change behavior. Within this framework, methods are conceptualized at three levels: policies that represent high-level societal and organizational decisions, interventions that are more direct methods to change behavior, and behavior change techniques that are the smallest components that on their own have the potential to change behavior. In order to provide intervention designers with a systematic method to select the policies, interventions, and/or techniques relevant for their context, a set of criteria can be used to help select intervention methods that are likely to be implemented and effective. One such set is the ?APEASE? criteria: affordability, practicability, effectiveness, acceptability, safety, and equity.
KW  - Health behaviors
KW  -  population health
KW  -  frameworks of behavior change
KW  -  Behavior Change Wheel
KW  -  methods to behavior change
KW  -  policies
KW  -  interventions
KW  -  behavior change techniques
KW  -  implementation
AV  - public
N1  - This version is the author accepted manuscript. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher?s terms and conditions.
Y1  - 2017/08/31/
ID  - discovery1569416
TI  - Methods of Health Behavior Change
JF  - Oxford Research Encyclopedias - Psychology
ER  -