Community Health Center Staff Perspectives on Financial Payments for Social Care

被引:1
作者
Lopez, Justin M. [1 ]
Wing, Holly [2 ]
Ackerman, Sara L. [2 ]
Hessler, Danielle [2 ]
Gottlieb, Laura M. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Berkeley Univ Calif San Francisco Joint, Berkeley, CA USA
[2] Univ Calif San Francisco, San Francisco, CA USA
[3] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Family & Community Med, Bldg 80,1001 Protrero Ave, San Francisco, CA 94110 USA
基金
美国医疗保健研究与质量局;
关键词
social risk screening; community health centers; community health workers; financial incentives; CLINICIAN EXPERIENCES; ELECTRONIC HEALTH; DETERMINANTS; INTERVENTION; TOOLS; NEEDS;
D O I
10.1111/1468-0009.12667
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Context: A growing crop of national policies has emerged to encourage health care delivery systems to ask about and try to address patients' social risks, e.g., food, housing, and transportation insecurity, in care delivery contexts. In this study, we explored how community health center (CHC) staff perceive the current and potential influence of fee-for-service payments on clinical teams' engagement in these activities.Methods: We interviewed 42 clinicians, frontline staff, and administrative leaders from 12 Oregon CHC clinical sites about their social care initiatives, including about the role of existing or anticipated financial payments intended to promote social risk screening and referrals to social services. Data were analyzed using both inductive and deductive thematic analysis approaches.Findings: We grouped findings into three categories: participants' awareness of existing or anticipated financial incentives, uses for incentive dollars, and perceived impact of financial incentives on social care activities in clinical practices. Lack of awareness of existing incentives meant these incentives were not perceived to influence the behaviors of staff responsible for conducting screening and providing referrals. Current or anticipated meaningful uses for incentive dollars included paying for social care staff, providing social services, and supporting additional fundraising efforts. Frontline staff reported that the strongest motivator for clinic social care practices was the ability to provide responsive social services. Clinic leaders/managers noted that for financial incentives to substantively change CHC practices would require payments sizable enough to expand the social care workforce as well.Conclusions: Small fee-for-service payments to CHCs for social risk screening and navigation services are unlikely to markedly influence CHC social care practices. Refining the design of financial incentives-e.g., by increasing clinical teams' awareness of incentives, linking screening to well-funded social services, and changing incentive amounts to support social care staffing needs-may increase the uptake of social care practices in CHCs.
引用
收藏
页码:1304 / 1326
页数:23
相关论文
共 68 条
[1]   Improving vaccination uptake among adolescents [J].
Abdullahi, Leila H. ;
Kagina, Benjamin M. ;
Ndze, Valentine Ngum ;
Hussey, Gregory D. ;
Wiysonge, Charles S. .
COCHRANE DATABASE OF SYSTEMATIC REVIEWS, 2020, (01)
[2]  
Accountable Health Communities model, Centers for Medicare Medicaid Services
[3]   "We were trying to do quality versus quantity": Challenges and opportunities at the intersection of standardized and personalized social care in community health centers [J].
Ackerman, Sara L. ;
Wing, Holly ;
Aceves, Benjamin ;
Pisciotta, Maura ;
Hessler, Danielle ;
Gottlieb, Laura M. .
SSM-QUALITATIVE RESEARCH IN HEALTH, 2023, 3
[4]   Screening for Food Insecurity in Pediatric Primary Care: A Clinic's Positive Implementation Experiences [J].
Adams, Elizabeth ;
Hargunani, Dana ;
Hoffmann, Laurel ;
Blaschke, Gregory ;
Helm, Joanna ;
Koehler, Anneliese .
JOURNAL OF HEALTH CARE FOR THE POOR AND UNDERSERVED, 2017, 28 (01) :24-29
[5]   Meanings and Misunderstandings: A Social Determinants of Health Lexicon for Health Care Systems [J].
Alderwick, Hugh ;
Gottlieb, Laura M. .
MILBANK QUARTERLY, 2019, 97 (02) :407-419
[6]   Improving the delivery of brief interventions for heavy drinking in primary health care: outcome results of the Optimizing Delivery of Health Care Intervention (ODHIN) five-country cluster randomized factorial trial [J].
Anderson, Peter ;
Bendtsen, Preben ;
Spak, Fredrik ;
Reynolds, Jillian ;
Drummond, Colin ;
Segura, Lidia ;
Keurhorst, Myrna N. ;
Palacio-Vieira, Jorge ;
Wojnar, Marcin ;
Parkinson, Kathryn ;
Colom, Joan ;
Kloda, Karolina ;
Deluca, Paolo ;
Baena, Begona ;
Newbury-Birch, Dorothy ;
Wallace, Paul ;
Heinen, Maud ;
Wolstenholme, Amy ;
van Steenkiste, Ben ;
Mierzecki, Artur ;
Okulicz-Kozaryn, Katarzyna ;
Ronda, Gaby ;
Kaner, Eileen ;
Laurant, Miranda G. H. ;
Coulton, Simon ;
Gual, Toni .
ADDICTION, 2016, 111 (11) :1935-1945
[7]  
[Anonymous], PRAPARE SCREENING TO
[8]  
[Anonymous], 2015, Community Preventive Services Task Force
[9]  
[Anonymous], 2021, Guide to implementing social risk screening and referralmaking
[10]  
[Anonymous], 2021, Oregon leverages Medicaid to address social determinants of health and health equity