Implementing social interventions in primary care

Lit review
by
Bloch, Gary and Linda Rozmovits

Release Date

2021

Geography

Canada

Language of Resource

English

Full Text Available

Yes

Open Access / OK to Reproduce

Yes

Peer Reviewed

No

Objective

We discuss accumulated evidence (Box 1) on social interventions and provide an overview of common primary care–based interventions (Table 1), highlighting their strengths, limitations and feasibility of implementation in different practice settings

Findings/Key points

Primary care–based social interventions offer an important means to mitigate threats to individual and community health posed by adverse social conditions. Effective interventions include those that target individual-level determinants, connections with community resources, community-focused partnerships and structures within health teams that affect equity. Accumulating evidence points to the positive impacts of social interventions on broad markers of health; however, most research in this area has focused on implementation and process measures, rather than outcomes. Some interventions require large, interdisciplinary health care resources to implement, but many are accessible to small group practices or individual providers.

Design/methods

Literature review (nonsystematic)

Keywords

Clinical guidance
Wrap-around services
Equity
About prescribers
Social services