Community-based organizations' perspectives on piloting health and social care integration in North Carolina.
Date
2023-10
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Abstract
Background
Community-based organizations (CBOs) are key players in health and social care integration initiatives, yet little is known about CBO perspectives and experiences in these pilot programs. Understanding CBO perspectives is vital to identifying best practices for successful medical and social care integration.Methods
From February 2021 to March 2021, we conducted surveys with 12 CBOs that participated in the North Carolina COVID-19 Social Support Program, a pre-pilot for North Carolina's Medicaid Sect. 1115 demonstration waiver program that addresses social drivers of health.Results
CBO participants preferred communication strategies that involved direct communication and felt clear communication was vital to the program's success. Participants expressed varied experiences regarding their ability to handle a changing volume of referrals. Participants identified their organizations' strengths as: strong organizational operations, past experiences with and understanding of the community, and coordination across organizations. Participants identified challenges as: difficulty communicating with clients, coping with capacity demands for scaling services, and lack of clear processes from external organizations. Almost all CBO participants expressed enthusiasm for participating in similar social care transformation programs in the future.Conclusions
CBO participants in our study had broadly positive experiences in the pilot program and almost all would participate in a similar program in the future. Participants provided perspectives that can inform health and social care integration initiatives, including strengths and challenges in such programs. To build and sustain health and social care integration programs, it is important to: (1) support CBOs through regular, direct communication that builds trust and power-sharing between CBO and health care entities; (2) leverage CBO community expertise; and (3) pursue an individualized assessment of CBO capacity and identify CBO capacity-building strategies that ensure program success and sustainability.Type
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Nohria, Raman, Junette Yu, Karissa Tu, Grace Feng, Shemecka Mcneil, Fred Johnson, Michelle Lyn, Karen Scherr, et al. (2023). Community-based organizations' perspectives on piloting health and social care integration in North Carolina. BMC public health, 23(1). p. 1914. 10.1186/s12889-023-16722-4 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/29997.
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Scholars@Duke

Raman Nohria
Raman Nohria, MD received his MD from the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University. He completed his residency training with the Lawrence Family Medicine Residency Program and hospital fellowship with the Duke Department of Family Medicine and Community Health. He currently serves as a teaching hospitalist on the Family Medicine Inpatient Service at Duke Regional Hospital as well as a core faculty member for the Duke Department of Family Medicine and Community Health. His expertise and scholarly interests include the social drivers of health, community-healthcare partnerships, and multi-stakeholder collaborations for health promotion and behavioral change.

Frederick Salvatore Johnson
Population Health Improvement
Correlation of Health and Social Determinants
Poverty, Race and Chronic Trauma
Social Capacity and Community Engagement
Community Health
Chronic Disease Care Management and Clinical Delivery Systems
Patient Self Management and Self Efficacy
Community Resource Design and Development
Community Health Informatics

Michelle Jacqueline Lyn
Population Health
Community Engagement and Capacity Building
Design and implementation of collaborative disease prevention/health promotion and health care delivery models
Design and implementation of care management models
Design and implementation of educational programs for health care professionals

Karen Scherr
I am an assistant professor in Family Medicine and Community Health. I am a board-certified family medicine and obesity medicine physician. My research focuses on clinic-community partnerships to improve treatment of patients with prediabetes and using social media to improve equity in treatment of pediatric obesity.
Education/Training:
BS, Texas Tech University, 2009
MD, Duke University, 2018
PhD in Business Administration, Marketing/Consumer Behavior, Duke University, 2018
Resident, Family Medicine, Duke University, 2018-Dec 2021
Fellow, National Clinician Scholars Program, Duke University, 2021-2023
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