Adding Social Determinants in the Electronic Health Record in Clinical Care in Hawai'i: Supporting Community-Clinical Linkages in Patient Care.

Connie M Trinacty, Emiline LaWall, Melinda Ashton, Deborah Taira, Todd B Seto, Tetine Sentell
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Abstract

Social and behavioral determinants of health, such as poverty, homelessness, and limited social support, account for an estimated 40% of health burdens and predict critical health outcomes. Many clinical-community linkages specifically focus on addressing such challenges. Given its distinctive history, culture, and location, Hawai'i has unique social factors impacting population health. Local health systems are striving to address these issues to meet their patients' health needs. Yet the evidence on precisely how health care systems and communities may work together to achieve these goals are limited both generally and specifically in the Hawai'i context. This article describes real-world efforts by 3 local health care delivery systems that integrate the identification of social needs into clinical care using the electronic health record (EHR). One health care system collects and assesses social challenges and interpersonal needs to improve the care for its frail seniors (aged 65 and older). Another system added key data fields around social support and inpatient mobility in the EHR to identify whether patients needed additional help during hospitalization and post-discharge. A third added a social needs screening tool (eg, housing instability, food insecurity, transportation needs) to its EHR to ensure that patient-specific needs can be appropriately addressed by the care team. Successful integration of this information into the EHR can identify, direct, and support clinical-community linkages and integrate such relationships into the care team. Many lessons can be learned from the implementation of these programs, including the importance of clinical relevance and ensuring capacity for social work liaisons trained for this work to address identified needs.

夏威夷临床护理电子健康记录中添加社会决定因素:支持患者护理中的社区临床联系。
健康的社会和行为决定因素,如贫困、无家可归和有限的社会支持,估计占健康负担的40%,并预测关键的健康结果。许多临床与社区的联系特别侧重于应对这些挑战。夏威夷有着独特的历史、文化和地理位置,有着影响人口健康的独特社会因素。地方卫生系统正在努力解决这些问题,以满足患者的健康需求。然而,关于医疗保健系统和社区如何合作实现这些目标的确切证据,无论是在总体上还是在夏威夷背景下,都是有限的。本文描述了3个地方医疗保健提供系统在现实世界中所做的努力,这些系统使用电子健康记录(EHR)将社会需求的识别整合到临床护理中。一个医疗保健系统收集和评估社会挑战和人际需求,以改善对体弱老年人(65岁及以上)的护理。另一个系统在EHR中添加了关于社会支持和住院患者流动性的关键数据字段,以确定患者在住院期间和出院后是否需要额外帮助。第三家在EHR中添加了社会需求筛查工具(如住房不稳定、粮食不安全、交通需求),以确保护理团队能够适当解决患者的特定需求。将这些信息成功整合到EHR中可以识别、指导和支持临床社区联系,并将此类关系整合到护理团队中。从这些计划的实施中可以吸取许多教训,包括临床相关性的重要性,以及确保为这项工作培训的社会工作联络员的能力,以满足已确定的需求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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