Abstract Introduction The Social Care Network (SCN) is a payor-provider-system integrated social care referral model designed to address historical challenges of scalability and sustainability through structured partnerships with community-based organizations (CBOs) and incentives for referral tracking and service delivery. Methods To evaluate the effect of the SCN on completion of referral updates (i. e. , loop-closure), receipt of services, and medical costs and utilization, we conducted a quasi-experimental difference-in-differences analysis among insured adults referred to the SCN (8/2022–10/2024). Medical costs and utilization were compared between individuals who did and did not receive services. Program outcomes were compared between SCN and non-SCN CBOs. Results Of 2, 305 SCN CBO referrals, 85% were closed-loop versus 24% of 8, 288 non-SCN CBO referrals (p. 001) ; 27% of SCN referrals resulted in services received versus 17% of non-SCN referrals (p. 001). Receiving social care was associated with a 617 reduction in per-member-per-month medical costs (p0. 001). Inpatient admissions declined by 26 per 1, 000 members per month (p0. 001) and unplanned admissions by 9 (p=. 002). Conclusions These results suggest that a scalable, sustainable social care network can be implemented within a health system. Embedding community-based social care in value-based contracts aligns accountability across sectors, increases successful referrals, and reduces downstream medical costs.
Galper et al. (Tue,) studied this question.