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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 2/2020

01-02-2020 | Care

Patient Perspectives on Addressing Social Needs in Primary Care Using a Screening and Resource Referral Intervention

Authors: Clarissa Hsu, PhD, Stephanie Cruz, PhD, Hilary Placzek, PhD, MPH, Michelle Chapdelaine, MPH, Sara Levin, MD, Fabiola Gutierrez, BA, Sara Standish, MBA, Ian Maki, MPH, Mary Carl, MHCDS, MPH, Miriam Rosa Orantes, BA, Duffy Newman, MHA, Allen Cheadle, PhD

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 2/2020

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Abstract

Background

Interest is growing in interventions to address social needs in clinical settings. However, little is known about patients’ perceptions and experiences with these interventions.

Objective

To evaluate patients’ experiences and patient-reported outcomes of a primary care-based intervention to help patients connect with community resources using trained volunteer advocates.

Design

Qualitative telephone interviews with patients who had worked with the volunteer advocates. Sample and recruitment targets were equally distributed between patients who had at least one reported success in meeting an identified need and those who had no reported needs met, based on the database used to document patient encounters.

Participants

One hundred two patients.

Interventions

Patients at the study clinic were periodically screened for social needs. If needs were identified, they were referred to a trained volunteer advocate who further assessed their needs, provided them with resource referrals, and followed up with them on whether their need was met.

Approach

Thematic analysis was used to code the data.

Key Results

Interviewed patients appreciated the services offered, especially the follow-up. Patients’ ability to access the resource to which they were referred was enhanced by assistance with filling out forms, calling community resources, and other types of navigation. Patients also reported that interacting with the advocates made them feel listened to and cared for, which they perceived as noteworthy in their lives.

Conclusions

This patient-reported information provides key insights into a human-centered intervention in a clinical environment. Our findings highlight what works in clinical interventions addressing social needs and provide outcomes that are difficult to measure using existing quantitative metrics. Patients experienced the intervention as a therapeutic relationship/working alliance, a type of care that correlates with positive outcomes such as treatment adherence and quality of life. These insights will help design more patient-centered approaches to providing holistic patient care.
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Metadata
Title
Patient Perspectives on Addressing Social Needs in Primary Care Using a Screening and Resource Referral Intervention
Authors
Clarissa Hsu, PhD
Stephanie Cruz, PhD
Hilary Placzek, PhD, MPH
Michelle Chapdelaine, MPH
Sara Levin, MD
Fabiola Gutierrez, BA
Sara Standish, MBA
Ian Maki, MPH
Mary Carl, MHCDS, MPH
Miriam Rosa Orantes, BA
Duffy Newman, MHA
Allen Cheadle, PhD
Publication date
01-02-2020
Publisher
Springer US
Keyword
Care
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 2/2020
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-019-05397-6

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