Magic Strategies: the basic biology of multilevel, multiscale, health intervention

Division of Epidemiology, New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, New York, United States
DOI
10.7287/peerj.preprints.8v1
Subject Areas
Drugs and Devices, Epidemiology, Evidence Based Medicine, Health Policy, Public Health
Keywords
rate distortion, regulation, social network, stability, uncertainty
Copyright
© 2013 Wallace et al.
Licence
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Cite this article
Wallace R, Wallace D. 2013. Magic Strategies: the basic biology of multilevel, multiscale, health intervention. PeerJ PrePrints 1:e8v1

Abstract

A survey of the cultural psychology and related literatures suggests that Western biomedicine's fascination with atomistic, individual-oriented, interventions is a cultural artifact that may have little consonance with complex, subtle, multiscale, multilevel, social, ecological, or biological realities. Other cultural traditions may, in fact, view atomistic strategies as inherently unreal. A contrary perspective suggests that the most effective medical or public health interventions must be analogously patterned across scale and level of organization: 'magic strategies' will almost always be synergistically - and often emergently - more effective than 'magic bullets'. The result can be formally derived in a relatively straightforward manner using an adaptation of the Black-Scholes economietric model, applied here to the metabolic cost of bioregulation under uncertainty. Multifactorial interventions focused at the human 'keystone' ecosystem level of mesoscale social and geographic groupings may be particularly effective.