Social Ecological Model and Systems Thinking
The social-ecological model frames health as the product of nested, interacting levels of influence — individual, interpersonal, organizational, community and societal — rather than of personal choices alone. Coupled with systems thinking, it directs health promotion to address the multiple, interconnected determinants that shape behaviour and health.
Definition
The social-ecological model is a framework that conceptualizes health behaviour and outcomes as determined by influences operating at multiple nested levels — typically intrapersonal, interpersonal, institutional/organizational, community, and public policy — and by the interactions among them.
Scope
This topic covers the ecological perspective on health promotion: its levels of influence, the reciprocal relationships between people and their environments, and the move from single-level behaviour-change models to multilevel and systems-based approaches. It is reference-educational, addressing how the model organizes thinking about determinants, not how to deliver a specific programme.
Core questions
- At which levels — individual, interpersonal, organizational, community, policy — do influences on a given health issue operate?
- How do these levels interact, and where are the leverage points for change?
- What does a systems-thinking view add beyond listing separate determinants?
Key concepts
- Levels of influence (intrapersonal to policy)
- Reciprocal person-environment interaction
- Multilevel and place-based determinants
- Leverage points and intervention level
- Systems thinking and feedback loops
- Embodiment
Key theories
- Ecological perspective on health promotion
- Health behaviour is shaped by intrapersonal, interpersonal, institutional, community and policy factors, so effective programmes intervene at several levels rather than targeting individuals alone.
- Ecosocial theory
- Population patterns of health embody, biologically, the social and material conditions in which people live; causation is multilevel, dynamic and historically situated.
Mechanisms
In the ecological view, factors at higher levels (policy, community, organizations) shape the contexts and opportunities available at lower levels (interpersonal, individual), while individual behaviour feeds back into those contexts. Systems thinking adds attention to feedback loops, interdependence and emergent effects, so that interventions are judged by how they shift a system rather than a single risk factor. Neighbourhood and area effects illustrate the model: features of place can influence health over and above individual characteristics.
Clinical relevance
The model helps health professionals see why individually focused advice often underperforms when community and policy conditions are unchanged. It is a conceptual lens for understanding multilevel determinants and does not provide individual diagnostic or treatment recommendations.
History
The model draws on Bronfenbrenner's ecology of human development (1979) and was adapted to public health by McLeroy and colleagues in 1988, who set out levels of influence for health promotion programmes. Later work in social epidemiology — Krieger's ecosocial theory and multilevel analyses of neighbourhood effects — extended the perspective toward systems and the biological embodiment of social conditions.
Debates
- How operational is the model in practice?
- The framework is widely used to organize thinking, but critics note it can describe many influences without specifying which levels to prioritize or how to weight competing leverage points, leaving programme design under-determined.
Key figures
- Kenneth McLeroy
- Urie Bronfenbrenner
- Nancy Krieger
- Ana Diez Roux
Related topics
Seminal works
- mcleroy-1988
- krieger-2001-ecosocial
- bronfenbrenner-1979
Frequently asked questions
- What are the levels in the social-ecological model?
- Commonly five: intrapersonal (individual), interpersonal (relationships), institutional or organizational, community, and public policy. Influences operate within and across these levels.
- How does systems thinking relate to the social-ecological model?
- Systems thinking complements the model by focusing on the interactions, feedback loops and emergent behaviour among levels, rather than treating each determinant as a separate, additive cause.