A controlled evaluation of social prescribing on loneliness for adults in Queensland: 8-week outcomes

Authors

Dingle, Genevieve A.
Sharman, Leah S.
Hayes, Shaun
Haslam, Catherine
Cruwys, Tegan
Jetten, Jolanda
Haslam, S. Alexander
McNamara, Niamh
Chua, David
Baker, James R.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Access Statement

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Introduction There have been few controlled evaluations of Social Prescribing (SP), in which link workers support lonely individuals to engage with community-based social activities. This study reports early outcomes of a trial comparing General Practitioner treatment-as-usual (TAU) with TAU combined with Social Prescribing (SP) in adults experiencing loneliness in Queensland.Methods Participants were 114 individuals who were non-randomly assigned to one of two conditions (SP, n = 63; TAU, n = 51) and assessed at baseline and 8 weeks, on primary outcomes (loneliness, well-being, health service use in past 2 months) and secondary outcomes (social anxiety, psychological distress, social trust).Results Retention was high (79.4%) in the SP condition. Time x condition interaction effects were found for loneliness and social trust, with improvement observed only in SP participants over the 8-week period. SP participants reported significant improvement on all other outcomes with small-to-moderate effect sizes (ULS-8 loneliness, wellbeing, psychological distress, social anxiety). However, interaction effects did not reach significance.Discussion Social prescribing effects were small to moderate at the 8-week follow up. Group-based activities are available in communities across Australia, however, further research using well-matched control samples and longer-term follow ups are required to provide robust evidence to support a wider roll out.

Description

Citation

Source

Frontiers in Psychology

Book Title

Entity type

Publication

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until