Addressing social determinants of noncommunicable diseases in primary care: a systematic review

To explore how primary care organizations assess and subsequently act upon the social determinants of noncommunicable diseases in their local populations. For this systematic review we searched the online databases of PubMed®, MEDLINE®, Embase® and the Health Management Information Consortium from i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bulletin of the World Health Organization 2020-11, Vol.98 (11), p.754-765B
Hauptverfasser: Allen, Luke N, Smith, Robert W, Simmons-Jones, Fiona, Roberts, Nia, Honney, Rory, Currie, Jonny
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container_issue 11
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container_title Bulletin of the World Health Organization
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creator Allen, Luke N
Smith, Robert W
Simmons-Jones, Fiona
Roberts, Nia
Honney, Rory
Currie, Jonny
description To explore how primary care organizations assess and subsequently act upon the social determinants of noncommunicable diseases in their local populations. For this systematic review we searched the online databases of PubMed®, MEDLINE®, Embase® and the Health Management Information Consortium from inception to 28 June 2019, along with hand-searching of references. Studies of any design that examined a primary care organization assessing social determinants of noncommunicable diseases were included. For quality assessment we used Cochrane's tool for assessing risk of bias in non-randomized studies of interventions. We used narrative data synthesis to appraise the extent to which the assessments gathered data on the domains of the World Health Organization social determinants of health framework. We identified 666 studies of which 17 were included in the review. All studies used descriptive study designs. Clinic-based and household surveys and interviews were more commonly used to assess local social determinants than population-level data. We found no examples of organizations that assessed sociopolitical drivers of noncommunicable diseases; all focused on sociodemographic factors or circumstances of daily living. Nevertheless, the resulting actions to address social determinants ranged from individual-level interventions to population-wide measures and introducing representation of primary care organizations on system-level policy and planning committees. Our findings may help policy-makers to consider suitable approaches for assessing and addressing social determinants of health in their domestic context. More rigorous observational and experimental evidence is needed to ascertain whether measuring social determinants leads to interventions which mitigate unmet social needs and reduce health disparities.
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subjects Bias
Committees
Consortia
Data
Disease
Disease management
Health care
Health disparities
Humans
Individual differences
Information management
Internet
Intervention
Local population
Management
Management information
Mortality
Narratives
Noncommunicable diseases
Noncommunicable Diseases - epidemiology
Organizations
Policy and planning
Policy making
Primary care
Primary Health Care
Public health
Quality assessment
Quality control
Reviews
Risk assessment
Social Determinants of Health
Social factors
Sociodemographics
Sociopolitical factors
Systematic review
Systematic Reviews
title Addressing social determinants of noncommunicable diseases in primary care: a systematic review
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