COVID-19 Disruptions to Social Care Delivery: A Qualitative Study in Two Large, Safety-Net Primary Care Clinics.

COVID-19 Disruptions to Social Care Delivery: A Qualitative Study in Two Large, Safety-Net Primary Care Clinics.

Publication date: Jul 26, 2024

Social care integration refers to the incorporation of activities into health systems that assist patients with health-related social needs (HRSNs) that negatively impact the health outcomes of their patients, such as food insecurity or homelessness. Social care integration initiatives are becoming more common. The COVID-19 pandemic strained health systems while simultaneously increasing levels of unmet social needs. To describe the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on established social care delivery in a primary care setting. We used qualitative semi-structured interviews of stakeholders to assess barriers and facilitators to social care delivery in the primary care setting during the COVID-19 health emergency. Data was analyzed using a hybrid inductive/deductive thematic analysis approach with both the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) and the Screen-Navigate-Connect-Address-Evaluate model of social care integration. Two safety-net, hospital-based primary care clinics with established screening for food insecurity, homelessness, and legal needs. Six physicians, six nurses, six members of the social work team (clinical social workers and medical case workers), six community health workers, and six patients (total Nā€‰=ā€‰30) completed interviews. Four major themes were identified. (1) A strained workforce experienced challenges confronting increased levels of HRSNs. (2) Vulnerable populations experienced a disproportionate negative impact in coping with effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on HRSNs. (3) COVID-19 protections compounded social isolation but did not extinguish the sense of community. (4) Fluctuations in the social service landscape led to variable experiences. The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted established social care delivery in a primary care setting. Many of the lessons learned about challenges to social care delivery when health systems are strained are important considerations that can inform efforts to expand social care delivery.

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Concepts Keywords
Clinics COVID-19
Homelessness food insecurity
Large primary care
Nurses social care integration
Pandemic

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH emergency
drug DRUGBANK Nitrazepam
disease VO USA
drug DRUGBANK Methylergometrine
drug DRUGBANK Creatinolfosfate
disease VO organization
disease VO population
disease MESH chronic diseases
drug DRUGBANK Ethanol
drug DRUGBANK Serine
disease VO viability
disease MESH housing instability
disease VO organ
disease IDO process
disease VO time
drug DRUGBANK Etoperidone
drug DRUGBANK Metformin
drug DRUGBANK Coenzyme M
disease MESH moral injury
disease MESH burnout
disease VO Imovax ID
drug DRUGBANK Ilex paraguariensis leaf
drug DRUGBANK Methionine
disease IDO host
drug DRUGBANK Trestolone
disease MESH unemployment
disease MESH strokes
disease IDO site
drug DRUGBANK Ranitidine
drug DRUGBANK Methylphenidate
disease VO Equity
disease VO report
disease MESH cancer
drug DRUGBANK Medrysone

Original Article

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