| Literature DB >> 29061603 |
Anjana Aery1, Anne Rucchetto2, Alexander Singer3, Gayle Halas3, Gary Bloch4,5, Ritika Goel4,6, Danyaal Raza4,5, Ross E G Upshur4,7,8, Jackie Bellaire4,9, Alan Katz3,10, Andrew David Pinto2,4,5,8.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Addressing the social determinants of health has been identified as crucial to reducing health inequities. However, few evidence-based interventions exist. This study emerges from an ongoing collaboration between physicians, researchers and a financial literacy organisation. Our study will answer the following: Is an online tool that improves access to financial benefits feasible and acceptable? Can such a tool be integrated into clinical workflow? What are patient perspectives on the tool and what is the short-term impact on access to benefits?Entities:
Keywords: cial determinants of health; health promotion; income; poverty; primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29061603 PMCID: PMC5665212 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-015947
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Clinic characteristics for six primary care sites in Ontario and Manitoba
| Clinic type | Location | Patient population | Provider(s) who will predominantly administer the tool | Method of recruiting patients |
| Family health team | Toronto, Ontario | Over 30% of patients live in neighbourhoods that have average incomes in the lowest quintile. | Family physicians and nurse practitioner | Reception staff provide patients an information sheet or healthcare providers initiate enrolment |
| Community health centre | Toronto, Ontario | Priority populations include newcomers and patients with substance use or mental health needs. | Family physician, nurse practitioners and social workers | Healthcare provider initiated |
| Family health team | Toronto, Ontario | Serves wide range of patients with a focus on the unattached, medically and/or socially complex, high-need patients | Family physicians and patient navigator | Healthcare provider initiated |
| Community health centre | Winnipeg, Manitoba | Serves one of the most impoverished areas in the city. The neighbourhood has an unemployment rate of 17% with 34% of the families living in poverty. There are 83% female lone-parent families and 16.9% of the community are members of a visible minority group with another 29% of indigenous ancestry. | Family physicians, nurse practitioners, nurses, social workers, support workers | Healthcare provider initiated |
| Community health centre | Winnipeg, Manitoba | Serves a diverse inner city community providing a very wide range of services to individuals, families, teens, adults and geriatrics within our geographic community. Special focus for priority populations of marginalised groups such as immigrants and refugees, transgendered individuals and those living with sexually transmitted infections. | Family physicians, nurse practitioners, nurses, social workers, support workers, counsellors | Healthcare provider initiated |
| Community health centre | Winnipeg, Manitoba | Serves a generally low-income north Winnipeg neighbourhood. Focus on patients within the catchment area with particular interest in chronic disease care. | Family physicians, nurse practitioner, nurses | Healthcare provider initiated |
Figure 1Implementation and evaluation of an online income tool.
Main outcome measures for implementation and impact of tool
| Measure | Source | Method of data collection | Domain | Time point |
| Acceptability of tool | Provider | Provider focus group and survey, patient survey and telephone interview | Acceptability | After 3-month study period |
| Feasibility of tool | Provider | Provider focus group and survey, patient survey and telephone interview | Feasibility | After 3-month study period |
| Change in income | Patient | Patient follow-up interview | Effectiveness | 1 month |
| Change in knowledge of benefits | Patient | Patient follow-up interview | Effectiveness | 1 month |