Research Methods for Multilevel Interventions to Reduce Health Disparities

There is a growing recognition that successful preventive interventions need to address social determinants of health. Effectively reducing health disparities often requires the use of study designs that go beyond the individual level randomized controlled trial; however, studies that evaluate multilevel interventions face unique challenges and require specialized design and analytical approaches.

Researchers can use the information and resources below to learn more about appropriate research methods for evaluating complex multilevel interventions to reduce health disparities.

Supplemental Journal Issue: Design and Analytic Methods to Evaluate Multilevel Interventions to Reduce Health Disparities

ODP's commitment to rigorous methods and health disparities research

Read Dr. Murray's Director's Message, "State-of-the-Science Methods to Evaluate Interventions that Reduce Health Disparities," discussing the journal issue and other resources for investigators.

ODP sponsored a supplemental issue of Prevention Science in July 2024 that brings together new ideas and examples of strong applications of existing design and analytic methods for studies aimed at reducing health disparities. Papers also include strategies for developing multilevel interventions that balance methodological rigor with design feasibility, acceptability, and ethical considerations.

See the list below for the 12 open-access articles featured in the supplemental issue. Guest editors David M. Murray, Ph.D. (ODP), and Melody S. Goodman, Ph.D. (New York University), discuss key points of the papers and provide more background about the issue in their accompanying commentary.

You can also refer to the quick guide below that ODP developed to help you navigate the issue and identify the papers that are most relevant to your work.

Quick Guide to the 2024 Supplemental Issue of Prevention Science

Note: The links in this document take you to an external, non-federal website. ODP is not responsible for, nor can we endorse, external content. You will be subject to the external website’s privacy policy when you leave our site.

Additional Resources for Research Methods and Health Disparities

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