How Do Small Groups Promote Behaviour Change? An Integrative Conceptual Review of Explanatory Mechanisms
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Background: Small groups are used to promote health, well-being, and personal change by altering members' perceptions, beliefs, expectations, and behaviour patterns. An extensive cross-disciplinary literature has articulated and tested theories explaining how such groups develop, function, and facilitate change. Yet these theoretical understandings are rarely applied in the development, description, and evaluation of health-promotion, group-based, behaviour-change interventions.
Methods: Medline database, library catalogues, search engines, specific journals and reference lists were searched for relevant texts. Texts were reviewed for explanatory concepts or theories describing change processes in groups, which were integrated into the developing conceptual structure. This was designed to be a parsimonious conceptual framework that could be applied to design and delivery.
Results: Five categories of interacting processes and concepts were identified and defined: (1) group development processes, (2) dynamic group processes, (3) social change processes, (4) personal change processes, and (5) group design and operating parameters. Each of these categories encompasses a variety of theorised mechanisms explaining individual change in small groups.
Conclusion: The final conceptual model, together with the design issues and practical recommendations derived from it, provides a practical basis for linking research and theory explaining group functioning to optimal design of group-based, behaviour-change interventions.
Mills F, Drury J, Hall C, Weston D, Symons C, Amlot R Commun Psychol. 2025; 3(1):40.
PMID: 40089592 DOI: 10.1038/s44271-025-00217-6.
The Mellow Babies parenting programme: role of group processes and interpersonal change mechanisms.
Tanner J, Wilson P, Wight D, Thompson L Front Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2025; 3():1395363.
PMID: 39816588 PMC: 11731860. DOI: 10.3389/frcha.2024.1395363.
A Social Network Lens to Community Health Worker Influence and Impact.
Yousefi Nooraie R, Naghibi D, Hernandez-Torres R, Cupertino P J Prim Care Community Health. 2025; 16():21501319241306706.
PMID: 39791944 PMC: 11724407. DOI: 10.1177/21501319241306706.
Horreh B, van Nassau F, Landais L, Vissenberg C, Van Dongen J, van der Ploeg H BMJ Open. 2025; 15(1):e087767.
PMID: 39788779 PMC: 11751900. DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-087767.
McGovern W, Addison M, McGovern R Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2024; 21(10).
PMID: 39457269 PMC: 11507594. DOI: 10.3390/ijerph21101297.