| Literature DB >> 35047213 |
Ryan P Theis1,2, Katherine Blackburn1,2, Gloria Lipori2,3, Christopher A Harle1,2, Michelle M Alvarado2,4, Peter J Carek2,5, Nadine Zemon2, Angela Howard2, Ramzi G Salloum1,2, Elizabeth A Shenkman1,2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Unmet social needs contribute to growing health disparities and rising health care costs. Strategies to collect and integrate information on social needs into patients' electronic health records (EHRs) show promise for connecting patients with community resources. However, gaps remain in understanding the contextual factors that impact implementing these interventions in clinical settings.Entities:
Keywords: electronic health records; implementation science; qualitative research; social determinants of health
Year: 2021 PMID: 35047213 PMCID: PMC8727713 DOI: 10.1017/cts.2021.842
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Transl Sci ISSN: 2059-8661
Patient interviews − participant characteristics
| Clinic interviews | Home interviews | Overall | ||||
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| Participant sex | ||||||
| Female | 14 | 74% | 15 | 75% | 29 | 74% |
| Male | 5 | 26% | 5 | 25% | 10 | 26% |
| Participant race | ||||||
| African-American, NH | 11 | 58% | 12 | 60% | 23 | 59% |
| Latina | 1 | 5% | 0 | 0% | 1 | 3% |
| White, NH | 5 | 26% | 8 | 40% | 13 | 33% |
| Not reported | 2 | 11% | 0 | 0% | 2 | 5% |
| Participant age
| ||||||
| Less than 40 years old | – | – | 3 | 15% | 3 | 15% |
| 40−59 years old | – | – | 11 | 55% | 11 | 55% |
| 60 years or older | – | – | 6 | 30% | 6 | 30% |
| REALM-SF score category
| ||||||
| High school | 10 | 56% | 3 | 100% | 13 | 62% |
| Seventh to eighth grade | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% | 0 | 0% |
| Fourth to sixth grade | 5 | 28% | 0 | 0% | 5 | 24% |
| Less than fourth grade | 3 | 17% | 0 | 0% | 3 | 14% |
| Module administration | ||||||
| Assisted | 11 | 58% | 20 | 100% | 31 | 79% |
| Unassisted | 8 | 42% | 0 | 0% | 8 | 21% |
Participant age was collected only from patients in the home interview group (n = 20).
The REALM-SF was administered only to patients who participated in in-person or videoconference interviews (n = 21). One patient in the clinic interview group was not administered the REALM-SF.
Abbreviations: NH, non-Hispanic; REALM-SF, Rapid Assessment of Adult Literacy in Medicine – Short Form.
Patient interviews − acceptability valence of social needs module content and follow-up practices
| Acceptability valence | Intervention component | Quotations | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Questions | Assessment | Discussion
| Overall | ||
| Positive | 54% | 59% | 74% | 62% | “You just never know what a person is going through. They are really good questions.” [Clinic, F, AA; ID #6] |
| Neutral/both | 33% | 41% | 15% | 33% | “Some of these questions are pretty simple. I mean, they’re average questions.” [Home, M, W; ID #40] |
| Negative | 13% | 0% | 8% | 5% | “That question about your mortgage or rent or whatever, I wouldn't [answer]. And the food… I wouldn't want to share that.” [Home, F, AA; ID #33] |
One home interview participant did not respond to questions on acceptability of social needs discussion.
Abbreviations: AA, African-American; F, female; ID, respondent identification number; M, male; W, White.
Patient interviews − acceptability of the social needs intervention, themes by TFA construct
| TFA Construct | Theme definition | Example quotation |
|---|---|---|
| Affective attitude | ||
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Rapport with provider (n = 21) | Acceptability of social needs interventions depends on the interaction and relationship that patients have with their provider. | “It just depends on who your doctor is. You got to have a relationship or a rapport with your doctor. And if you're not able to trust your doctor, it doesn't matter, if you have to do the questionnaire or not. People are not going to be truthful.” [Clinic, F, AA; ID #3] |
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Life changes (n = 13) | Assessing social needs more frequently is important because a patient’s life condition can change. | “A lot can change in six months… You do not have any updates if you just do it once a year. You're still relying on what the questionnaire said at the beginning of the year. Your situation might have changed in a couple of months.” [Home, F, AA; ID #21] |
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Privacy (n = 9) | Acceptability of social needs interventions depends on the privacy and confidentiality of answers to social needs questions or discussions about social needs. | “That’s something that once it’s on [the portal]… someone can see it. This is between me and my doctor. You do it on the Internet, there’s a chance that that can get out there to somebody else. You got billing department. You got every doctor I see on that portal. [Clinic, M, W; ID #7] |
| Burden | ||
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Discomfort (n = 12) | Patients may be less likely to disclose social needs because the questions or assessment cause discomfort (are personal, sensitive, or trigger emotions). | “My daughter’s 20, and we still struggle… I know if you ask my daughter, she would decline because she wouldn't want to be honest and truthful when it would hurt. Hurts when you answer the questions sometimes… You're like oh, wait, that makes me feel like failing as a parent and stuff.” [Clinic, F, NR; ID #8] |
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Time limitations (n = 9) | Having meaningful social needs assessment or discussion is difficult if the process takes too much time, or if done in a context where the patient or provider feels rushed for time. | “There’s a lot of times depending on when you arrive at your appointment… I do not have time to answer questionnaires. I do not want the stress of trying to answer this and bring it back here… so I can give it to her on time. Those little things.” [Clinic, M, AA; ID #9] |
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Stigma (n = 8) | Patients may be less likely to disclose social needs due to concerns about being judged by providers or other patients. | “I’m at a point where I may need more [medication] but I am afraid to ask, so I don't ask for more… I do not want them to judge me…” [Home, F, AA; ID #21] |
| Perceived effectiveness | ||
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Positive outcomes (n = 16) | Assessing and addressing social needs will lead to positive outcomes, such as "help", referrals, or positive health outcomes. | “If you hadn't had food, maybe they could say, okay, she could be suffering from you know being hungry… If you're behind on your mortgage and bills or something - could be related to stress, high blood pressure, stuff like that.” [Home, F, AA; ID #33] |
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Important for routine care (n = 15) | Assessing and/or acting on social needs is important for a patient’s normal or routine health care. | “Well, [the questions] were more about living, and that was important… I do not know why a doctor wouldn't be concerned about those questions.” [Clinic, F, W; ID #11] |
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Trust building (n = 13) | Assessing social needs builds trust or understanding between patient and provider, and may improve their relationship. | “The physicians will know exactly what you're going through, exactly what you're feeling, and then… they can be able to relate to you.” [Clinic, F, AA; ID #20] |
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Encouraging disclosure (n = 11) | Answering social needs questions or discussing social needs will encourage patients to disclose personal information they might otherwise withhold. | “Because [the provider] can get more out of it if he’s talking… person-to-person. And [patients will] tell you more how they feel about it, if questions was asked to them. [Home, F, AA; ID #29] |
| Self-efficacy | ||
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Honesty (n = 14) | Patients will answer social needs questions meaningfully if they have a personal commitment to being honest or truthful. | “I'm not afraid to tell anything to my doctor because I'm an open book. And I'm [on] short time anyhow… So the more information they have the better can help me, you know.” [Home, M, W; ID #27] |
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Technology literacy (n = 13) | Patients may not use technical applications for social needs assessment because they don't understand or can't use the technology (e.g., computers, tablets). | “No, [I would not be comfortable with the technology] because I don't know about anything about a computer or a phone. Only thing I know is how to say ‘Hello’ and ‘Goodbye’.” [Home, F, AA; ID #21] |
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Difficult to read/understand (n = 10) | Patients may have difficulty reading or understanding social needs questions and/or understanding social needs discussion with providers. | “[Completing questions in the waiting room] would suck… My eyes are really bad and it’s hard for me to see…. I do not like to strain my eyes.” [Home, M, W; ID #40] |
Abbreviations: AA, African-American; F, female; ID, respondent identification number; M, male; NR, not reported; TFA, Theoretical Framework of Acceptability; W, White.
Provider focus groups – participant characteristics
| Clinic 1 | Clinic 2 | |||
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| Provider type | ||||
| Physician | 3 | 43% | 3 | 60% |
| Nurse | 2 | 29% | 1 | 20% |
| Social worker | 1 | 14% | 0 | 0% |
| Clinical pharmacist | 1 | 14% | 0 | 0% |
| Clinic manager | 0 | 0% | 1 | 20% |
| Years in role | ||||
| Less than 5 years | 5 | 71% | 3 | 60% |
| 5−10 years | 2 | 29% | 0 | 0% |
| Greater than 10 years | 0 | 0% | 2 | 40% |
| Participant sex | ||||
| Female | 6 | 86% | 5 | 100% |
| Male | 1 | 14% | 0 | 0% |
| Participant race | ||||
| White | 4 | 57% | 3 | 60% |
| Black or African-American | 2 | 29% | 1 | 20% |
| Asian | 1 | 14% | 0 | 0% |
| Unknown | 0 | 0% | 1 | 20% |
Provider focus groups − acceptability/feasibility of the social needs intervention, themes by CFIR domain
| CFIR domain | Theme definition | Example quotation |
|---|---|---|
| Intervention characteristics | ||
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SDoH and access | Effect that social determinants have on patients’ access to care | "When they don't have the basic needs of life, it’s hard to get into the clinic, it’s hard for us to take care of medical problems." [Clinic 1, Physician; ID #1 |
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Positive outcomes | Positive effect that social needs intervention has on health and service outcomes | “[If patients] were able to get help towards [affordability of medications], and they start taking their medications regularly. Of course, you see an immediate improvement in the blood pressure." [Clinic 1, Nurse; ID #5] |
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Redundant with practice | Overlap of module social needs questions with current patient care practices | "I often ask some of the questions when they're relevant, but if I then had to go and like click over to the other section and fill it in… I do not know if it would be worth my while.” [Clinic 2, Physician; ID #8] |
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Workflow impact | Disruptions in clinical workflow resulting from social needs intervention | “[Patients] already have different issues that they are coming to see you with… Then you get behind and then everyone… gets upset of you because of your own clinic flow… I do not know, it just creates a lot for you." [Clinic 2, Physician; ID #8] |
| Outer setting | ||
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Need for privacy | Patient needs for privacy that affect disclosure of social needs | "If we’re going to talk about child abuse or domestic violence, there’s like a reluctance to report out of fear… and DCF involvement." [Clinic 1, Social worker; ID #2] |
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Need for comfort | Patient needs for comfort that are impacted by social needs intervention questions or timing | "Some questions even just by asking the question, you can offend somebody… ‘Do you have trouble affording your medications?’ ‘What do you mean? Do I look like I have trouble affording my medications?'" [Clinic 1, Clinical pharmacist; ID #7] |
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Resource availability | Availability of community resources to address patients’ social needs | “There’s a lot of children programs out there for like schools and connecting them… And for elderly adults, I know there’s also programs for them too especially if [they have]… complex medical conditions.” [Clinic 2, Physician; ID #8] |
| Inner setting | ||
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Clinician capacity | Capacity of clinicians to administer social needs questions | "Maybe the LPNs could sit down during a nurse visit and make time for those questions. I mean, we all can take turns, all of us can do it. It’s just a lot of patients. I don't see how one person can be responsible for those questions." [Clinic 1, Nurse; ID #5] |
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Time limitations | Limited time available to assess or discuss social needs with patients | “Time is the number one [barrier]… There’s a fear among physicians of… opening up a can of worms… So many of our patients have multiple of these issues that you would end up just kind of taking a lot of the whole visit." [Clinic 2, Physician; ID #11] |
| Individual characteristics | ||
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Limited solutions | Provider belief that solutions for addressing social needs are limited | “[If you're] opening this up… there’s not really a lot you can do right then and [patients] also already have different issues that they are coming to see you with.” [Clinic 2, Physician; ID #8] |
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Encouraging disclosure | Provider belief that social needs intervention can prompt patients to discuss issues | "Just having it there and if they answer it, it’s probably the starting point for you to go into the conversation. And you’ll feel a little more comfortable going and talking about it if there’s already something there." [Clinic 1, Physician; ID #4] |
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Trust building | Provider belief that social needs intervention can build trust/rapport with patients | "When you talk to them one-on-one and you really develop a relationship, they do tend to tell you more information than they might tell the physician when the physician goes in." [Clinic 1, Nurse; ID #5] |
Abbreviations: CFIR, Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research; DCF, Department of Children and Families; LPN, licensed practical nurse; SDoH, social determinants of health.