Training Student Volunteers as “Community Resource Navigators” to Integrate Health and Social Care in Primary Care

IntroductionAddressing the social determinants of health (SDOH) is critical to reducing health inequalities. In the United States (US), national guidance recommends healthcare providers screen for and respond to social needs, such as food insecurity and housing instability. However, health providers...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of integrated care 2022-04, Vol.22 (S1), p.105
Hauptverfasser: Gautam, Diwas, Kutzer, Kate, Sandhu, Sahil, Dennis, Erika, Xu, Jacqueline, Blanchard, Lilian, Munoz, Veronica, Drake, Connor, Crowder, Carolyn, Eisenson, Howard, Bettger, Janet
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:IntroductionAddressing the social determinants of health (SDOH) is critical to reducing health inequalities. In the United States (US), national guidance recommends healthcare providers screen for and respond to social needs, such as food insecurity and housing instability. However, health providers often lack the staff and resources to ensure patients can access social services or community resources. Volunteers can build capacity to integrate health and social care as community resource navigators.Description of context and objectiveOur interdisciplinary team of students, clinicians, and researchers co-developed a curriculum to train student volunteers as community resource navigators to work with patients at a community health center in North Carolina via telephone. The learning objectives for our curriculum included (1) knowledge of SDOH and association with health outcomes, (2) familiarity with local resources and ability to provide navigation support to help patients connect to resources, and (3) patient communication skills over the phone, including active and empathetic listening, motivational interviewing, and cultural humility.Targeted populationOur training targets university students interested in or currently pursuing health professions.Highlights (innovation, impact and outcomes)Our training was first offered to a cohort of 9 undergraduate and nursing students in 2019, and then revised and offered to 12 undergraduate and graduate students over 6 weeks in 2020. Across the cohorts, 10 students were trained to serve patients in English and 9 were trained to serve patients in Spanish. The multi-modal curricula, delivered by experienced student navigators, consisted of five components: didactic instruction on SDOH and program logistics, mock patient calls and documentation, shadowing of experienced navigators, supervised calls with real patients, and homework assignments. In 2020, we adapted our training materials for virtual delivery due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In the training evaluation, trainees described the knowledge and skills gained from the training, the long-term benefits towards their educational and professional career goals, and interactive delivery of the training. Learners also described areas for improvement, including more time learning about community resources and practicing challenging patient conversations. In the last two years, student volunteers have served over 500 clinic patients, majority of whom were low-income, uninsu
ISSN:1568-4156
1568-4156
DOI:10.5334/ijic.ICIC21135