Integrating Social Needs Into Health Care: A Twenty-Year Case Study Of Adaptation And Diffusion

Feb 01, 2018 | R. D. Onie, R. Lavizzo-Mourey, T. H. Lee, J. S. Marks and R. J. Perla

The US health care system has recently begun to account for patients’ unmet social needs in care delivery and payment reform. This article presents a twenty-year qualitative case study of five stages of diffusion-testing and learning, standardization, replication, shifting from doing to enabling, and catalyzing broad adoption-of a practical approach for integrating social needs into clinical care. This case study of Health Leads and its funders confirms the importance of focusing on a clear aim, investing in model testing and standardization to enable subsequent responsiveness to the market, and the willingness of innovators and their investors to cede control of a model to allow local adaption and accelerate broad adoption.

PubMed Abstract


R. D. Onie, R. Lavizzo-Mourey, T. H. Lee, J. S. Marks and R. J. Perla. (2018). Integrating Social Needs Into Health Care: A Twenty-Year Case Study Of Adaptation And Diffusion. Health Aff (Millwood), 37(2), 240-247.