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Committee Material Published 19 Jan 2024 ↗ View on Parliament

Frontline health and social care staff do not only deal with immediate medical needs. People also present to the health service with issues that relate to unmet social needs, which can in turn, over time, develop into medical needs. Increased use of social prescribing can both relieve pressure on clinical pathways and protect good health through enhancing people’s connections with, and ability to participate in activities in their local communities—particularly for people who often lack resou...

Frontline health and social care staff do not only deal with immediate medical needs. People also present to the health service with issues that relate to unmet social needs, which can in turn, over time, develop into medical needs. Increased use of social prescribing can both relieve pressure on clinical pathways and protect good health through enhancing people’s connections with, and ability to participate in activities in their local communities—particularly for people who often lack resources to access these activities independently. There is potential for health services to make much greater use of this approach amongst groups that are c Type: conclusion | Number: 11 | Paragraph: 47 | Response status: under_consideration Government response: Decline National ambitions for the delivery of social prescribing have been set out in the NHS Long Term Plan. Thiscommitted to rolling out social prescribing across primary care networks (PCNs) in England so that over 900,000 people were re