Centre for Primary Care, Wolfson Institute of Population Health, Queen Mary University of London, Yvonne Carter Building, 58 Turner Street, London, E1 2AB, UK.
Bromley By Bow Health Partnership, XX Place Health Centre, Mile End Hospital, Bancroft Rd, Bethnal Green, London, E1 4DG, UK.
BMC Med. 2023 Mar 13;21(1):91. doi: 10.1186/s12916-023-02796-9.
Social prescribing (SP) usually involves linking patients in primary care with services provided by the voluntary and community sector. Preliminary evidence suggests that SP may offer a means of connecting patients with community-based health promotion activities, potentially contributing to the prevention of long-term conditions, such as type 2 diabetes (T2D).
Using mixed-methods realist evaluation, we explored the possible contribution of SP to individual-level prevention of T2D in a multi-ethnic, socio-economically deprived population in London, UK. We made comparisons with an existing prevention programme (NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme (NDPP)) where relevant and possible. Anonymised primary care electronic health record data of 447,360 people 18+ with an active GP registration between December 2016 and February 2022 were analysed using quantitative methods. Qualitative data (interviews with 11 primary care clinicians, 11 social prescribers, 13 community organisations and 8 SP users at high risk of T2D; 36 hours of ethnographic observations of SP and NDPP sessions; and relevant documents) were analysed thematically. Data were integrated using visual means and realist methods.
People at high risk of T2D were four times more likely to be referred into SP than the eligible general population (RR 4.31 (95% CI 4.17-4.46)), with adjustment for socio-demographic variables resulting in attenuation (RR 1.33 (95% CI 1.27-1.39)). More people at risk of T2D were referred to SP than to NDPP, which could be explained by the broad referral criteria for SP and highly supportive (proactive, welcoming) environments. Holistic and sustained SP allowed acknowledgement of patients' wider socio-economic constraints and provision of long-term personalised care. The fact that SP was embedded within the local community and primary care infrastructure facilitated the timely exchange of information and cross-referrals across providers, resulting in enhanced service responsiveness.
Our study suggests that SP may offer an opportunity for individual-level T2D prevention to shift away from standardised, targeted and short-term strategies to approaches that are increasingly personalised, inclusive and long-term. Primary care-based SP seems most ideally placed to deliver such approaches where practitioners, providers and commissioners work collectively to achieve holistic, accessible, sustained and integrated services.
社会处方(SP)通常涉及将初级保健中的患者与志愿和社区部门提供的服务联系起来。初步证据表明,SP 可能为将患者与基于社区的健康促进活动联系起来提供一种手段,从而有可能预防 2 型糖尿病(T2D)等长期疾病。
使用混合方法的现实主义评估,我们在英国伦敦一个多民族、社会经济贫困的人群中,探索了 SP 对个体预防 T2D 的可能贡献。在相关和可能的情况下,我们与现有的预防计划(NHS 糖尿病预防计划(NDPP))进行了比较。使用定量方法分析了 2016 年 12 月至 2022 年 2 月期间,447360 名 18 岁以上、有活跃全科医生登记的人群的匿名初级保健电子健康记录数据。对 11 名初级保健临床医生、11 名社会处方医师、13 个社区组织和 8 名 T2D 高危 SP 用户进行了定性访谈(访谈时间为 36 小时);以及相关文件)进行了主题分析。使用视觉手段和现实主义方法进行了数据整合。
与符合条件的一般人群相比,T2D 高危人群被转介到 SP 的可能性高四倍(RR4.31(95%CI4.17-4.46)),调整社会人口统计学变量后,RR 减弱为 1.33(95%CI1.27-1.39))。更多的 T2D 高危患者被转介到 SP,而不是 NDPP,可以用 SP 的广泛转介标准和高度支持(积极、欢迎)的环境来解释。全面和持续的 SP 允许承认患者更广泛的社会经济限制,并提供长期个性化护理。SP 嵌入当地社区和初级保健基础设施的事实促进了信息的及时交换和提供者之间的交叉转介,从而提高了服务响应能力。
我们的研究表明,SP 可能为个体 T2D 预防提供机会,从标准化、有针对性和短期策略转向越来越个性化、包容性和长期策略。基于初级保健的 SP 似乎最适合在从业者、提供者和决策者共同努力实现全面、可及、持续和综合服务的地方提供此类方法。