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Social Prescribing in the Community Bromley by bow centre presentation. July 2014. Social Determinants of Health. The issue we sought to address. O ver 50% of health need is socially determined .
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Social Prescribing in the CommunityBromley by bow centre presentation July 2014
The issue we sought to address • Over 50% of health need is socially determined. • Areas where the population has poor social determinants of health, such as Tower Hamlets, have the following characteristics : • Over-representation of long term conditions such as diabetes • Late presentations of cancer • Lower than average life expectancy • High levels of depression • High rates of child and adult obesity • High rates of GP consultation, prescribing and admissions
The logic for social prescribing • Improving social determinants of health improves people’s knowledge, skills, confidenceand conditions to lead a healthy lifestyle • Unique position of healthcare professionals to understand patient needs • A referral madeby a healthcare professional carries authority • Healthcare professionals do not always know what community services are available and how to refer patients to them
How we established a social prescribing function and embedded it in five GP practices • Built relationships with patients, service providers &GP practices • Collated a directory of local services & providers • Embedded a simple referral form, to be used to refer to all services, in practices’ EMIS systems • Co-ordinator managed all referrals & supported them to access a range of local services • Follow up surveys, interviews & informal conversations to evaluate & refine the service; feedback given to GP practices
Referrals Referral rates: • 331 referrals received in 6 month pilot; currently receiving 100+ per month • Increasing number of referrals have more complex needs Referral services: • 70% health programmes (e.g. Health Trainers) • 20% services for vulnerable people (e.g. older people, people with mental health issues) • 10% employment support, adult learning and/or welfare advice
Outcomes 70% said it had made a significant improvement in their lives 75% said that it had resolved or partially resolved the issue 70% of patients said that they would not have accessed the service otherwise
The need for social prescribing for cancer patients • 25% - 60% of cancer survivors have unmet social needs, which impacts their health and wellbeing • There is limited coordination between the services and support offered by the health and voluntary sectors, which contributes to poor cancer patient experience • As an increasing number of people are living with or beyond cancer, un-met social needs will become a problem for more people
The aims of a cancer specific social prescribing service • Improve quality of life • Raise awareness of the value of community services • Support integration of care and support • Reduce demand on health services
Development of a cancer specific social prescribing service • Work with key stakeholders (e.g. CNSs, GPs, Barts Health NHS Trust, Macmillan Cancer Support, London Cancer, existing social prescribing services) • Scope a cancer specific social prescribing service across East London over four months • Integrate with primary care and secondary care through linking with the Recovery Care Package (Holistic Needs Assessment and Cancer Care Review)