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Assessing strengths, challenges, and equity via pragmatic evaluation of a social care program

DeCamp LR, Yousuf S, Peters C, Cruze E, Kutchman E
Academic Pediatrics

Objective: Models of pragmatic social care program evaluations are needed as many are clinical services programs and are not focused on research, limiting the ability to address key evidence gaps. We describe the use of the Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation and Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework to conduct a pragmatic evaluation of a pediatric ambulatory social care program. Methods: Our evaluation was based on automated electronic health record data on clinics, community partners, social care program processes, and social needs screen data linked to patient sociodemographic characteristics from February 2020 to September 2021. Two Reach outcomes were assessed: 1) the proportion of eligible patients that completed social needs screening and 2) the proportion of positive screens that receive social care program follow-up. The Effectiveness outcome was meeting families’ resource need(s). Results: Reach among eligible patients who completed screening was 79.2%. Reach for positive screens receiving social care program referrals demonstrated a higher proportion of referrals among patients with a preferred healthcare language (PHL) of Spanish (45.1%) compared to English (31.2%, P <.001). Effectiveness analyses demonstrated that overall, 75.1% of social care program referrals had all social resource needs met, 17.5% had some needs met, and 7.4% had no needs met. The percent of patients with all resource needs met was higher for patients with PHL of Spanish or Non-English, Non-Spanish (79% for each respectively) compared to English (73%, P =.023). Conclusions: Maximizing automated data collection is likely the most feasible way for social care programs to complete evaluation activities outside of the research context.

DeCamp LR, Yousuf S, Peters C, Cruze E, Kutchman E. Assessing strengths, challenges, and equity via pragmatic evaluation of a social care program. Academic Pediatrics. 2023;S1876-2859(23)00135-3. DOI:10.1016/j.acap.2023.03.017. PMID: 37024078

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Publication year
Resource type
Peer Reviewed Research
Outcomes
Process
Social Needs/ SDH
Population
Children and Youth
Screening research
Yes
Social Determinant of Health
Food/Hunger
Housing Stability
Legal Services
Utilities
Study design
Pre-post without Comparison Group