Open Journal of Preventive Medicine

Volume 12, Issue 2 (February 2022)

ISSN Print: 2162-2477   ISSN Online: 2162-2485

Google-based Impact Factor: 0.43  Citations  

Social Prescribing through Primary Care: A Systematic Review of the Evidence

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DOI: 10.4236/ojpm.2022.122003    537 Downloads   2,597 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

Background: In primary care, social prescribing (SP) is where a patient is referred to a “link worker”, who considers their needs and then “prescribes” or connects them to appropriate community-based resources and services. Recent policy and guidance in the UK has significantly expanded the provision of SP to improve patient health and wellbeing. Methods: This study conducted a systematic review of evidence for SP effectiveness and to report needs addressed, interventions provided, and behaviour change techniques employed. Inclusion criterion was patient referral from primary care to a SP link worker. Online databases were searched for studies published from February 2016 to July 2021. Searches were restricted to English language only. Risk of bias assessment and a narrative analysis were undertaken. Results: Eight studies were included. All studies reported some positive outcomes. There were weaknesses and limitations in study design and in reporting of results: a lack of comparative controls, short duration and single point follow-up, a lack of standardised assessments, missing data, and a failure to consider potential confounding factors. All studies had features which indicated a high risk of bias. Conclusion: Evidence for the value and positive impact of SP is accumulating, but evaluation design remains relatively weak. There is a need to improve evaluation through robust methodological design and the adoption of universal outcome measures and evaluation/analytical framework. SP should seek to assess patient wellbeing, self-management, and quality of lifeoutcomes systematically, and adopt behaviour change techniques to enable healthier lifestyles in the short and long term.

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Griffiths, C. , Hina, F. and Jiang, H. (2022) Social Prescribing through Primary Care: A Systematic Review of the Evidence. Open Journal of Preventive Medicine, 12, 31-58. doi: 10.4236/ojpm.2022.122003.

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