<p>Public health policies often struggle to achieve intended outcomes due to the complex and adaptive nature of health and health systems. This paper explores how systems and complexity thinking can clarify persistent gaps between national policy intent and local implementation. It argues that conventional, top-down, command-and-control leadership strategies are frequently ineffective when complex adaptive dynamics dominate. Adaptive leadership and systems-informed approaches—cross-sector collaboration, stakeholder engagement, and co-design of interventions—invariably lead to more ‘fit-for-purpose solutions’. Integrating systems and complexity perspectives provide a bridge to close the gap between policy design and effective, equitable public health practice. The paper illustrates based on the case example of a coastal town’s diabetes prevention strategy, how adaptive, participatory, and systems-oriented approaches lead to more resilient and effective health interventions.</p>

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Public health policy to community practice: meeting the systemic challenges

  • Joachim Sturmberg,
  • Elisabeth Paul

摘要

Public health policies often struggle to achieve intended outcomes due to the complex and adaptive nature of health and health systems. This paper explores how systems and complexity thinking can clarify persistent gaps between national policy intent and local implementation. It argues that conventional, top-down, command-and-control leadership strategies are frequently ineffective when complex adaptive dynamics dominate. Adaptive leadership and systems-informed approaches—cross-sector collaboration, stakeholder engagement, and co-design of interventions—invariably lead to more ‘fit-for-purpose solutions’. Integrating systems and complexity perspectives provide a bridge to close the gap between policy design and effective, equitable public health practice. The paper illustrates based on the case example of a coastal town’s diabetes prevention strategy, how adaptive, participatory, and systems-oriented approaches lead to more resilient and effective health interventions.