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A Mental Health Social Prescribing Trial (British Red Cross) (PROSPECT)

U

University of South Wales

Status

Withdrawn

Conditions

Mental Health Wellness 1

Treatments

Behavioral: Delayed Appointment
Behavioral: Immediate Appointment

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04099095
IRAS 261969

Details and patient eligibility

About

Social prescribing is a way of understanding the things that are important to a person and then using these to find groups and resources in their local community that can help them meet their goals and understand their problems. Social prescribing can be used with people who have physical health problems, mental health problems, social problems such as loneliness or financial/housing problems.

The Welsh Government has supported the creation of these social prescribing services across Wales. However, the evidence showing that social prescribing is a good way of improving a person's well-being and quality of life is not very strong.

This project is an evaluation of a new social prescribing service delivered by British Red Cross in two areas in Wales. British Red Cross have made a new social prescribing service, where a link worker works with a patient who has mild/moderate mental or emotional health problems, to understand their needs and set them goals for the future over 12 weeks of core support. The link worker will also help them find services in their local community that might help them achieve their goals.

The study uses a waitlist trial, thus some participants will get to meet the link worker and have the intervention straight away, while others will have to wait for 20 working days. From this, the researchers can compare the people who had the intervention straight away with the people who had to wait. Scores on well-being and quality of life questionnaires will be used to see the effects of the intervention on participants.

Full description

Social prescribing is an umbrella term to describe ways of linking people to sources of community-based, non-medical support. There is no fixed definition of social prescribing.

In Wales, social prescribing has many models which require the NHS and third sector organisations to work closely together. These involve referral to a link worker/community connector/social prescriber from primary care or another referral route, such as social work or housing. These roles all practice social prescribing, which includes a 'what matters' conversation, co-productive goal setting, motivational interviewing and coaching, followed by referral to third sector and community groups/professionals for support and activity to meet the person's individual goals.

Social prescribing is being widely implemented and has support from Welsh Government. However, there is limited research evidence to judge its effectiveness, who benefits (if at all) and its value for money. Public Health Wales identified gaps in the published evidence for social prescribing, particularly in the evaluation of social prescribing projects in primary care in Wales. It is therefore important to employ more rigorous and high-quality methods to evaluating social prescribing interventions in the community.

As part of a Welsh Government Third Sector grant for delivering a social prescribing pilot with a focus on mental health, British Red Cross are undertaking a research project in two localities in Wales, Caerphilly and Pembrokeshire, to create and test a model of social prescribing. As part of this initiative, a link worker will work with the individual over a 12-week period to discuss their needs, goals and future steps. A link worker helps the individual to explore extra services that may support them in improving their health, sense of wellness and independence by providing practical and emotional support.

This study will conduct an evaluation alongside the implementation and delivery of the British Red Cross social prescribing intervention, using a randomised waitlist evaluation method. Participants will either receive the social prescribing intervention within 5 days of giving consent, or 20 working days after consent and baseline data collection. This will allow the researchers to draw comparisons between the immediate intervention group and the waitlist controls, who continue to receive usual care. This will also provide a more robust evidence base for social prescribing interventions. The study will use measures of quality of life and wellbeing.

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Primary care service users who are at the point of referral
  • Experiencing mild/moderate mental health and/or emotional wellbeing disorders( eg anxiety or depression)
  • Aged 18+ years
  • Registered with a General Practitioner in Wales

Exclusion criteria

  • Unable to give written informed consent
  • Unable to answer all questions (WEMWBS) at baseline
  • Worsening of mental health condition to the point where more intensive support is required

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

0 participants in 2 patient groups

Immediate Appointment
Active Comparator group
Description:
Intervention group who receive the Social Prescription without delay. The effectiveness of the consultation and referral process will be assessed
Treatment:
Behavioral: Immediate Appointment
Delayed Appointment
Active Comparator group
Description:
Wait-list control group who receive Social Prescribing after a delay of 20 working days. The effectiveness of the consultation and referral process will be assessed
Treatment:
Behavioral: Delayed Appointment

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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