Boston University School of Medicine.
Boston Medical Center.
Med Care. 2019 Jun;57 Suppl 6 Suppl 2:S133-S139. doi: 10.1097/MLR.0000000000001029.
Social determinants affect health, yet there are few systematic clinical strategies in primary care that leverage electronic health record (EHR) automation to facilitate screening for social needs and resource referrals. An EHR-based social determinants of health (SDOH) screening and referral model, adapted from the WE CARE model for pediatrics, was implemented in urban adult primary care.
This study aimed to: (1) understand the burden of SDOH among patients at Boston Medical Center; and (2) evaluate the feasibility of implementing a systematic clinical strategy to screen new primary care patients for SDOH, use EHR technology to add these needs to the patient's chart through autogenerated ICD-10 codes, and print patient language-congruent referrals to available resources upon patient request.
This observational study assessed the number of patients who were screened to be positive and requested resources for social needs. In addition, we evaluated the feasibility of implementing our SDOH strategy by determining the proportion of: eligible patients screened, providers signing orders for positive patient screenings, and provider orders for resource referral guides among patients requesting resource connections.
In total, 1696 of 2420 (70%) eligible patients were screened. Employment (12%), food insecurity (11%), and problems affording medications (11%) were the most prevalent concerns among respondents. In total, 367 of 445 (82%) patients with ≥1 identified needs (excluding education) had the appropriate ICD-10 codes added to their visit diagnoses. In total, 325 of 376 (86%) patients who requested resources received a relevant resource referral guide.
Implementing a systematic clinical strategy in primary care using EHR workflows was successful in identifying and providing resource information to patients with SDOH needs.
社会决定因素会影响健康,但初级保健中很少有系统的临床策略利用电子健康记录 (EHR) 自动化来促进社会需求筛查和资源转介。我们将 WE CARE 儿科模型中用于儿科的社会决定因素健康 (SDOH) 筛查和转介模型进行了改编,应用于城市成人初级保健。
本研究旨在:(1)了解波士顿医疗中心患者的 SDOH 负担;(2)评估实施一种系统临床策略的可行性,即筛查新的初级保健患者的 SDOH,使用 EHR 技术通过自动生成的 ICD-10 代码将这些需求添加到患者的图表中,并在患者请求时打印与患者语言一致的资源转介。
本观察性研究评估了筛查出阳性患者并为其社会需求请求资源的患者数量。此外,我们还通过确定以下比例来评估实施我们的 SDOH 策略的可行性:筛查的合格患者比例、对阳性患者筛查签署医嘱的提供者比例以及请求资源连接的患者中资源转介指南的提供者医嘱比例。
共有 2420 名合格患者中的 1696 名(70%)接受了筛查。受访者中最普遍的问题是就业(12%)、食品不安全(11%)和难以负担药物(11%)。共有 445 名(82%)有≥1 项已识别需求(不包括教育)的患者的就诊诊断中添加了适当的 ICD-10 代码。共有 376 名(86%)请求资源的患者收到了相关资源转介指南。
在初级保健中使用 EHR 工作流程实施系统的临床策略,成功地识别了有 SDOH 需求的患者,并为其提供了资源信息。