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A retrospective observational study - exploring food pantry referral as a clinical proxy for residents' ability to address unmet health-related social needs

March M, Schumacher D, Beck AF, Burkhardt MC, Reyner A, Klein M
Med Educ Online

BACKGROUND: Assessment of residents' ability to address unmet health-related social needs to promote social accountability remains subjective and difficult. Existing approaches rely on self-assessment surveys of residents' knowledge, skills, and attitudes following social determinants of health training, with few studies explicitly measuring clinical practice. We aimed to characterize social accountability using resident referrals to a food pantry embedded in a pediatric primary care center as an objective measure of resident ability to address unmet health-related social needs in clinical practice. 

METHODS: This retrospective observational study occurred from 1 January 2019, to 30 June 2020, at an urban, pediatric primary care center with an embedded food pantry. All pediatric residents received social accountability education during a 2-week Advocacy rotation intern year. During clinic visits, pediatric residents were expected to act on results of a standardized social screen that included two food insecurity questions. Food pantry referral was the primary outcome. Food pantry referral data were extracted from food pantry logs. 

RESULTS: During the 18-month study period, the pediatric primary care center food pantry was accessed at 1,031 visits. Of the 860 physician-based visits that resulted in pantry referral, 63% (n = 545) were initiated by residents. Eighty-six percent of residents (134/156) made ≥ 1 referral. Across all years, residents placed a mean of 3 (range 1-16) food pantry referrals. 

CONCLUSIONS: During our study, most residents placed at least one pantry referral in response to identifying food insecurity either via the screen or during conversation with the family. Referral to a primary care embedded food pantry, one way to address acute food insecurity may serve as a measurable proxy to assess residents' ability to address unmet health-related social needs and promote social accountability in healthcare delivery.

March M, Schumacher D, Beck AF, Burkhardt MC, Reyner A, Klein M. A retrospective observational study - exploring food pantry referral as a clinical proxy for residents' ability to address unmet health-related social needs. Med Educ Online. 2024;29(1):2404295. DOI:10.1080/10872981.2024.2404295. PMID: 39303220

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Publication year
Resource type
Peer Reviewed Research
Outcomes
Process
Provider Experience of Care
Population
Health Care Professionals
Social Determinant of Health
Food/Hunger
Study design
Other Study Design