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Social Prescribing for Individuals Living with Mental Illness in an Australian Community Setting: A Pilot Study
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Social Prescribing for Individuals Living with Mental Illness in an Australian Community Setting: A Pilot Study

Christina Aggar, Tamsin Thomas, Christopher Gordon, Jacqueline Bloomfield and James Baker
Community Mental Health Journal, Vol.57(1), pp.189-195
2020
PMID: 32399601
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Published (Version of record)CC BY V4.0 Open Access
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Abstract

Community healthcare Behavioural health Case management Nursing Health and Support Services
Social prescribing, also known as "community referral", is a means of referring individuals living in the community to existing local non-clinical health, welfare, and social support services. International evidence demonstrates that social prescribing improves biopsychosocial quality of life, and burden on health services. Australia's first social prescribing pilot program for individuals with mental illness (mood and psychotic spectrum disorders) was implemented in Sydney in 2016/2017; this study evaluates that program. Participants included 13 adults who were assessed at baseline and six-month follow-up. Outcomes included self-perceived quality of life, welfare needs, health status, loneliness, social participation, and economic participation. Results indicate significant improvements in quality of life and health status. This pilot program demonstrates that social prescribing may improve participant outcomes. It fits well within Australian health policy and funding models which focus on bolstering community care, and may be scalable, particularly in geographically isolated communities.

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