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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Social prescribing: less rhetoric and more reality. A systematic review of the evidence

TLDR
A systematic review of social prescribing programmes being widely promoted and adopted in the UK National Health Service found current evidence fails to provide sufficient detail to judge either success or value for money.
Abstract
Objectives Social prescribing is a way of linking patients in primary care with sources of support within the community to help improve their health and well-being. Social prescribing programmes are being widely promoted and adopted in the UK National Health Service and so we conducted a systematic review to assess the evidence for their effectiveness. Setting/data sources Nine databases were searched from 2000 to January 2016 for studies conducted in the UK. Relevant reports and guidelines, websites and reference lists of retrieved articles were scanned to identify additional studies. All the searches were restricted to English language only. Participants Systematic reviews and any published evaluation of programmes where patient referral was made from a primary care setting to a link worker or facilitator of social prescribing were eligible for inclusion. Risk of bias for included studies was undertaken independently by two reviewers and a narrative synthesis was performed. Primary and secondary outcome measures Primary outcomes of interest were any measures of health and well-being and/or usage of health services. Results We included a total of 15 evaluations of social prescribing programmes. Most were small scale and limited by poor design and reporting. All were rated as a having a high risk of bias. Common design issues included a lack of comparative controls, short follow-up durations, a lack of standardised and validated measuring tools, missing data and a failure to consider potential confounding factors. Despite clear methodological shortcomings, most evaluations presented positive conclusions. Conclusions Social prescribing is being widely advocated and implemented but current evidence fails to provide sufficient detail to judge either success or value for money. If social prescribing is to realise its potential, future evaluations must be comparative by design and consider when, by whom, for whom, how well and at what cost. Trial registration number PROSPERO Registration: CRD42015023501.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The role of community centre-based arts, leisure and social activities in promoting adult well-being and healthy lifestyles.

TL;DR: The results suggest that community centre activities of this nature offer benefits that are generically supportive of health behaviour changes, and can perform an important role in supporting the health improvement objectives of formal health care services.

Social prescribing: a review of community referral schemes

TL;DR: The review aims to set the scene for the conditions under which social prescribing has arisen and consider the efficacy of different referral options and to assess the means by which and the extent to which these schemes have been evaluated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Primary-care-based social prescribing for mental health: an analysis of financial and environmental sustainability

TL;DR: This study demonstrates that social prescribing services are potentially able to pay for themselves through reducing future healthcare costs and are effective, low-carbon interventions, when compared with cognitive behavioral therapy or antidepressants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improving wellbeing and self-efficacy by social prescription.

TL;DR: • Social Prescribing links patients in the Primary Care setting with non-medical sources of community support.
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