The obesity epidemic is a continuing and growing major global multi-scale problem. Designing appropriate policies and interventions has been challenging since obesity is a complex problem, crossing the following six scales: genetic, physiological, individual, group/social network, physical (built) environment, and societal. The overall goal of this proposed project is to develop the Virtual Populations for Obesity Prevention (VPOP), a software platform that can generate an agent-based model encompassing the six obesity- relevant scales of any metropolitan area that can help decision makers to design, evaluate, and test proposed (or existing) obesity interventions and policies. VPOP will bring multiple innovations by (1) being the first model to bring together and integrate the six different scales that affect obesity; (2) including novel representations of numerous pathways and relationships; (3) leading to new insights and targets for obesity-control policies and interventions; (4) being grounded in an unprecedented breadth and depth of real- world multi-scale obesity-related data; (5) heavily involving decision makers in multi-scale model development to maximize policy-relevancy and translation of VPOP results into useful action; (6) developing new ways of representing and visualizing multi-scale results; and (7) transforming obesity-related data collection and decision making. Our multi-disciplinary team is led by Global Obesity Prevention Center (GOPC), which focuses on developing and implementing multi-scale systems science approaches, methods, and tools to address obesity, and brings together experts from the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC)/ Carnegie Mellon University (CMU), Cornell, and the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK). The proposed VPOP and our participation in Interagency Modeling and Analysis Group (IMAG), and Multi-scale Modeling Consortium (MSM) activities would substantially leverage our existing GOPC and PSC/CMU resources and efforts. This includes extensive field studies to provide a large and broad data set to help populate, calibrate, and validate the VPOP and forming a Stakeholder Working Group to guide VPOP development, testing, and implementation.
Specific Aim 1 will develop VPOP, a platform that can generate a geospatially explicit computational model representing the six obesity-relevant scales for any metropolitan area.
Specific Aim 2 will entail utilizing VPOP to generate multi-scale simulation models of two sample metropolitan areas (the Baltimore Metropolitan Statistical Area and New York City) to use to identify the key drivers of obesity in children and adults across the six different scales and determine which factors may be maximally sensitive to specific programs and policies.
For Specific Aim 3, we will translate the VPOP- generated models to decision-making by working with key stakeholders, such as city policy makers, health and planning department leadership, healthcare administrators, clinicians, and third-party payers to test and optimize a specific set of obesity-control policies and interventions.

Public Health Relevance

The obesity epidemic is a growing, global, complex, multi-scale problem, making the design of appropriate policies and control measures challenging. We propose to develop the Virtual Populations for Obesity Prevention (VPOP), a software platform that can generate an agent-based model encompassing six obesity- relevant scales [genetic, physiological, individual, group/social network, physical (built) environment, and societal] of any metropolitan area. VPOP-generated models can be used to design, refine and evaluate obesity interventions and policies and serve as a model for the use of multi-scale systems science methods to guide obesity prevention policy and programs in the United States and elsewhere.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project--Cooperative Agreements (U01)
Project #
5U01HD086861-04
Application #
9543517
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZEB1)
Program Officer
Bures, Regina M
Project Start
2015-09-27
Project End
2020-07-31
Budget Start
2018-08-01
Budget End
2019-07-31
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Johns Hopkins University
Department
Public Health & Prev Medicine
Type
Schools of Public Health
DUNS #
001910777
City
Baltimore
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
21205
Nau, Claudia; Kumanyika, Shiriki; Gittelsohn, Joel et al. (2018) Identifying Financially Sustainable Pricing Interventions to Promote Healthier Beverage Purchases in Small Neighborhood Stores. Prev Chronic Dis 15:E12
Lee, Bruce Y; Ferguson, Marie C; Hertenstein, Daniel L et al. (2018) Simulating the Impact of Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Warning Labels in Three Cities. Am J Prev Med 54:197-204
Bartsch, Sarah M; Asti, Lindsey; Nyathi, Sindiso et al. (2018) Estimated Cost to a Restaurant of a Foodborne Illness Outbreak. Public Health Rep 133:274-286
Min, Jungwon; Zhao, Yaling; Slivka, Lauren et al. (2018) Double burden of diseases worldwide: coexistence of undernutrition and overnutrition-related non-communicable chronic diseases. Obes Rev 19:49-61
Lee, Bruce Y; Bartsch, Sarah M; Skrip, Laura et al. (2018) Are the London Declaration's 2020 goals sufficient to control Chagas disease?: Modeling scenarios for the Yucatan Peninsula. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 12:e0006337
Bartsch, Sarah M; Huang, Susan S; McKinnell, James A et al. (2018) The Economic Value of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Carbapenem-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae Toolkit. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 39:516-524
Lee, Bruce Y; Bartsch, Sarah M; Mui, Yeeli et al. (2017) A systems approach to obesity. Nutr Rev 75:94-106
Lee, Bruce Y; Mueller, Leslie E; Tilchin, Carla G (2017) A systems approach to vaccine decision making. Vaccine 35 Suppl 1:A36-A42
Mui, Yeeli; Gittelsohn, Joel; Jones-Smith, Jessica C (2017) Longitudinal Associations between Change in Neighborhood Social Disorder and Change in Food Swamps in an Urban Setting. J Urban Health 94:75-86
Lee, Bruce Y; Haidari, Leila A (2017) The importance of vaccine supply chains to everyone in the vaccine world. Vaccine 35:4475-4479

Showing the most recent 10 out of 38 publications