학술논문

Medical-Financial Partnerships: Cross-Sector Collaborations Between Medical and Financial Services to Improve Health
Document Type
article
Source
Academic Pediatrics. 20(2)
Subject
Paediatrics
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Health Services
Clinical Research
Prevention
Behavioral and Social Science
Health and social care services research
8.1 Organisation and delivery of services
Generic health relevance
No Poverty
Good Health and Well Being
Banking
Personal
Budgets
Delivery of Health Care
Economic Status
Financial Stress
Humans
Income
Mentoring
Motivational Interviewing
Poverty
Primary Health Care
Public Assistance
Referral and Consultation
Social Determinants of Health
Social Work
Taxes
cross-sector partnerships
financial health
population health
social determinants of health
Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine
Pediatrics
Language
Abstract
Financial stress is the root cause of many adverse health outcomes among poor and low-income children and their families, yet few clinical interventions have been developed to improve health by directly addressing patient and family finances. Medical-Financial Partnerships (MFPs) are novel cross-sector collaborations in which health care systems and financial service organizations work collaboratively to improve health by reducing patient financial stress, primarily in low-income communities. Financial services provided by MFPs include individually tailored financial coaching, free tax preparation, budgeting, debt reduction, savings support, and job assistance, among others. MFPs have been shown to improve finances and, in the few existing studies available, health outcomes. We describe the rationale for MFPs and examine 8 established MFPs providing financial services under 1 of 3 models: full-scope on-site service partnerships; targeted on-site service partnerships; and partnerships facilitating referral to off-site financial services. The services MFPs provide complement clinical social risk screening and navigation programs by preventing or repairing common financial problems that would otherwise lead to poverty-related social needs, such as food and housing insecurity. We identify common themes, as well as unique strengths and solutions to a variety of implementation challenges MFPs commonly encounter. Given that the financial circumstances and health outcomes of socially marginalized patients and families are closely linked, MFPs represent a promising and feasible cross-sector service delivery approach and a new model for upstream health care to promote synergistic financial well-being and health improvement.