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A review of the evidence assessing impact of social prescribing on healthcare demand and cost implications

Kimberlee, Richard; Polley, Marie; Bertotti, Marcello; Pilkington, Karen; Refsum, Caroline

Authors

Marie Polley

Marcello Bertotti

Karen Pilkington

Caroline Refsum



Abstract

The bio-psycho-social model of illness encourages healthcare practitioners to think beyond anatomy and physiology to consider how the interplay of mind, body and social circumstances affect health and wellbeing. Medicine has much to offer in treating the biological aetiology of illness and recent commitments to parity of esteem are expected to give equal priority to addressing social, psychological and physical aspects of health. To date, however, the capacity for healthcare practitioners to address the social problems that precipitate and perpetuate ill health have been limited. Social prescribing is a means by which healthcare professionals seek to address the non-medical causes of ill health with non-medical interventions. This paper reviews the evidence for the impact and costs of social prescribing.

Citation

Kimberlee, R., Polley, M., Bertotti, M., Pilkington, K., & Refsum, C. (2017). A review of the evidence assessing impact of social prescribing on healthcare demand and cost implications

Report Type Technical Report
Publication Date Jun 1, 2017
Deposit Date Sep 15, 2017
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Keywords social prescribing, primary care, general practice, wellbeing
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/886566