Social prescribing programmes to prevent or delay frailty in community-dwelling older adults
Social prescribing programmes to prevent or delay frailty in community-dwelling older adults
The increasing incidence of frailty is a health and social care challenge. Social prescription is advocated as an important approach to allow health professionals to link patients with sources of support in the community. This study aimed to determine the current evidence on the effectiveness of social prescribing programmes, to delay or reduce frailty in frail older adults living in the community. A systematic literature review of published (DARE, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, NICE and SCIE, National Health Service (NHS) Economic Evaluation Database) and unpublished databases (OpenGrey; WHO Clinical Trial Registry; ClinicalTrials.gov) were searched to July 2019. Studies were eligible if they reported health, social or economic outcomes on social prescribing, community referral, referral schemes, wellbeing programmes or interventions when a non-health link worker was the intervention provider, to people who are frail living in the community. We screened 1079 unique studies for eligibility. No papers were eligible. There is therefore a paucity of evidence reporting the effectiveness of social prescribing programmes for frail older adults living in the community. Given that frailty is a clinical priority and social prescribing is considered a key future direction in the provision of community care, this is a major limitation.
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Smith, Toby O.
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Jimoh, Oluseyi F.
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Cross, Jane
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Allan, Louise
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Corbett, Anne
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Sadler, Euan
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Khondoker, Mizanur
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Whitty, Jennifer
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Valderas, Jose M.
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Fox, Christopher
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27 November 2019
Smith, Toby O.
fa6c848c-28b5-4060-99c5-d3a5982eb052
Jimoh, Oluseyi F.
cdcebd54-c987-4649-a4a1-f1ad8d54a852
Cross, Jane
b751f8db-baac-49bc-9dea-ece83800e181
Allan, Louise
b485500c-77e0-4cde-9ec1-281089c83738
Corbett, Anne
325a1edd-5325-4981-a5df-787d53f36d5e
Sadler, Euan
e5891abe-c97b-4e74-b9b3-6d7c43435360
Khondoker, Mizanur
83864d9c-4088-491b-9576-c2756f88e7a3
Whitty, Jennifer
ff981e43-111b-4a31-a240-9fb0cba44e0c
Valderas, Jose M.
486297b3-c041-4a3d-bc4f-3848a8d8e7e3
Fox, Christopher
27b83cd5-51f3-4b98-995f-e44496349b0b
Smith, Toby O., Jimoh, Oluseyi F., Cross, Jane, Allan, Louise, Corbett, Anne, Sadler, Euan, Khondoker, Mizanur, Whitty, Jennifer, Valderas, Jose M. and Fox, Christopher
(2019)
Social prescribing programmes to prevent or delay frailty in community-dwelling older adults.
Geriatrics, 4 (4), , [65].
(doi:10.3390/geriatrics4040065).
Abstract
The increasing incidence of frailty is a health and social care challenge. Social prescription is advocated as an important approach to allow health professionals to link patients with sources of support in the community. This study aimed to determine the current evidence on the effectiveness of social prescribing programmes, to delay or reduce frailty in frail older adults living in the community. A systematic literature review of published (DARE, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, NICE and SCIE, National Health Service (NHS) Economic Evaluation Database) and unpublished databases (OpenGrey; WHO Clinical Trial Registry; ClinicalTrials.gov) were searched to July 2019. Studies were eligible if they reported health, social or economic outcomes on social prescribing, community referral, referral schemes, wellbeing programmes or interventions when a non-health link worker was the intervention provider, to people who are frail living in the community. We screened 1079 unique studies for eligibility. No papers were eligible. There is therefore a paucity of evidence reporting the effectiveness of social prescribing programmes for frail older adults living in the community. Given that frailty is a clinical priority and social prescribing is considered a key future direction in the provision of community care, this is a major limitation.
Text
geriatrics-04-00065
- Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 26 November 2019
Published date: 27 November 2019
Additional Information:
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Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 436392
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/436392
ISSN: 2308-3417
PURE UUID: d4be3c60-1031-473d-aa78-1538545b4d37
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Date deposited: 10 Dec 2019 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:56
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Contributors
Author:
Toby O. Smith
Author:
Oluseyi F. Jimoh
Author:
Jane Cross
Author:
Louise Allan
Author:
Anne Corbett
Author:
Mizanur Khondoker
Author:
Jennifer Whitty
Author:
Jose M. Valderas
Author:
Christopher Fox
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