Barriers and facilitators to screen for and address social needs in primary care practices in Maryland: a qualitative study.

IF 1.6 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Frontiers in health services Pub Date : 2024-06-17 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/frhs.2024.1380589
Sadaf Kazi, Claire Starling, Arianna Milicia, Bryan Buckley, Rachel Grisham, Emily Gruber, Kristen Miller, Hannah Arem
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Abstract

Background: Social needs screening can help modify care delivery to meet patient needs and address non-medical barriers to optimal health. However, there is a need to understand how factors that exist at multiple levels of the healthcare ecosystem influence the collection of these data in primary care settings.

Methods: We conducted 20 semi-structured interviews involving healthcare providers and primary care clinic staff who represented 16 primary care practices. Interviews focused on barriers and facilitators to awareness of and assistance for patients' social needs in primary care settings in Maryland. The interviews were coded to abstract themes highlighting barriers and facilitators to conducting social needs screening. The themes were organized through an inductive approach using the socio-ecological model delineating individual-, clinic-, and system-level barriers and facilitators to identifying and addressing patients' social needs.

Results: We identified several individual barriers to awareness, including patient stigma about verbalizing social needs, provider frustration at eliciting needs they were unable to address, and provider unfamiliarity with community-based resources to address social needs. Clinic-level barriers to awareness included limited appointment times and connecting patients to appropriate community-based organizations. System-level barriers to awareness included navigating documentation challenges on the electronic health record.

Conclusions: Overcoming barriers to effective screening for social needs in primary care requires not only practice- and provider-level process change but also an alignment of community resources and advocacy of policies to redistribute community assets to address social needs.

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马里兰州初级保健实践中筛查和解决社会需求的障碍和促进因素:一项定性研究。
背景:社会需求筛查有助于调整医疗服务以满足患者需求,并解决影响最佳健康的非医疗障碍。然而,我们需要了解存在于医疗生态系统多个层面的因素是如何影响初级医疗机构收集这些数据的:我们进行了 20 次半结构式访谈,涉及医疗服务提供者和初级保健诊所工作人员,他们代表了 16 家初级保健诊所。访谈的重点是马里兰州初级医疗机构在了解和帮助患者的社会需求方面存在的障碍和促进因素。我们对访谈进行了编码,以抽象出主题,突出进行社会需求筛查的障碍和促进因素。我们采用社会生态模型,通过归纳法对这些主题进行了整理,划分出个人、诊所和系统层面上识别和解决患者社会需求的障碍和促进因素:我们发现了一些个人意识障碍,包括患者对说出社会需求感到羞耻、医疗服务提供者对提出他们无法解决的需求感到沮丧,以及医疗服务提供者对解决社会需求的社区资源不熟悉。诊所层面的认识障碍包括有限的预约时间以及将患者与适当的社区组织联系起来。系统层面的认识障碍包括在电子健康记录上进行文档记录的困难:要克服在初级保健中有效筛查社会需求的障碍,不仅需要改变实践和提供者层面的流程,还需要调整社区资源和宣传政策,以重新分配社区资产来满足社会需求。
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