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Social determinants of health play a crucial role in influencing individual health outcomes, especially among older adults. Social prescribing has emerged as a transformative intervention, bridging clinical care and community support to address these determinants effectively. This approach has shown promise in reducing the negative physical and psychosocial impacts of social isolation and loneliness in older adults.1 Social prescribing refers to the practice of linking patients to non-medical community resources. It addresses factors such as loneliness, financial stress, and inadequate living conditions that traditional healthcare cannot fully address. The NHS Long-Term Plan in the UK has integrated social prescribing.2 Social prescribers or link workers who connect patients with appropriate community services are central to the success of social prescribing. These individuals provide varied levels of support, from simple information sharing to ongoing, intensive engagement.2 As illustrated by the research of Drinkwater et al. (2019), Yadav et al. (2024), Dambha-Miller et al. (2021), and Calderón-Larrañaga et al. (2021), social prescribing holds promise for delivering holistic, integrated care, yet its successful implementation and evaluation present significant challenges.2-5 Despite the potential benefits, implementing social prescribing faces hurdles such as inconsistent screening tools, communication gaps between healthcare providers and social prescribers, and challenges in engaging patients with multiple chronic conditions.4 Dambha-Miller et al. (2021) emphasise the need for strong leadership, interface roles like care navigators, and co-located services to facilitate collaboration and trust among healthcare professionals. Effective integration ensures that social determinants of health are addressed alongside medical care, ultimately improving patient outcomes and reducing healthcare utilisation.4 However, structural tensions between health and social care systems, organisational silos, and poor communication continue to impede integration. Overcoming these barriers requires aligning goals, enhancing record-sharing capabilities, and fostering a culture of collaboration within healthcare systems.4 Calderón-Larrañaga et al. (2021) provide a comprehensive framework for implementing and evaluating social prescribing. This framework identifies four key dimensions for success: individual characteristics, interpersonal relations, organisational contingencies, and policy structures. It underscores the importance of tailored interactions, informed support, and ongoing collaboration across sectors.5 Several models and frameworks have been identified that facilitate the successful implementation of social prescribing. For example, a "holistic" model integrates patients' social needs with clinical care, while a "relational" model for link workers involves ongoing, flexible interactions that adapt to patients' changing needs. A "redistributive" model also ensures that community resources are equitably distributed to address diverse patient needs effectively.5 Integrating primary care with social services is crucial for older adults with multimorbidity. The World Health Organization's Integrated Care for Older People (ICOPE) approach aims to transform health and social care systems to deliver integrated, person-centred care for older individuals.6 This approach optimises older adults' intrinsic capacity and functional ability through a continuum of care, reorienting health and social services towards a coordinated person-centred model. Social prescribing complements the ICOPE approach, as demonstrated by its success in reducing depression and loneliness among the elderly in rural Korea during COVID-19.7 While social prescribing holds immense transformative potential, it's important to acknowledge that it's not a one-size-fits-all solution. Challenges such as funding limitations, capacity constraints, and the need for clear role definitions for social prescribers persist. Moreover, the evidence base for social prescribing's effectiveness remains methodologically weak, underscoring the need for more rigorous, context-sensitive evaluations. These challenges highlight the need for robust evaluation frameworks that reflect the complexities of social interventions and stable funding to ensure the sustainability of social prescribing initiatives. To fully harness social prescribing's potential, robust evaluation frameworks that effectively capture the complexities of social interventions are crucial. Policymakers have a key role in ensuring stable funding, supporting bottom-up policymaking, and creating flexible monitoring strategies that can adapt to the dynamic nature of social prescribing. Social prescribing represents a significant shift towards holistic, community-integrated healthcare. Addressing social determinants of health offers a pathway to improved well-being and reduced healthcare demand. However, its success depends on overcoming integration, communication, and resource allocation challenges. The combined insights from recent studies and frameworks, including WHO's ICOPE approach, provide valuable guidance for refining social prescribing practices, ultimately contributing to a more equitable and effective healthcare system.
Arvind Mathur (Mon,) studied this question.