Introduction
Social prescribing, which may also be referred to by other titles such as connector schemes (Tierney et al., Reference Tierney, Wong, Roberts, Boylan, Park, Abrams, Reeve, Williams and Mahtani2020), community referral (Husk et al., Reference Husk, Blockley, Lovell, Bethel, Bloomfield, Warber, Pearson, Lang, Byng and Garside2016; All Ireland Social Prescribing Network, 2021), and care navigation (Pesut et al., Reference Pesut, Duggleby, Warner, Fassbender, Antifeau, Hooper, Greig and Sullivan2017; NHS Inform, 2022), describes a pathway that uses a person-centred approach to lift up individuals through engagement with a broad range of different community-based activities and services (Kimberlee, Reference Kimberlee2015; SCIE, 2020). Examples of such community-based activities and services include art-based activities, social cafes, tenancy support services, and swimming, walking, and gardening groups. Although the term ‘social prescribing’ might imply an action of authoritative direction or be accompanied by perceptions of paternalism (Brown et al., Reference Brown, Mahtani, Turk and Tierney2021), the term is a bit of a misnomer as the ethos that underpins the practice is one of empowerment (Kimberlee, Reference Kimberlee2015; SCIE, 2020).
The social prescribing pathway begins with the act of referral. The simplest form of social prescribing is where a professional simply directs the individual to a potentially useful service. A more holistic form, which better represents the practice of social prescribing, involves referral to a social prescribing practitioner (Kimberlee, Reference Kimberlee2015; SCIE, 2020). There are multiple avenues of referral into the social prescribing pathway, including via healthcare, social care, the third sector, and by the individual in question referring themselves to a social prescribing practitioner (Welsh Government, 2022). The social prescribing practitioner will support the individual to identify what their needs are and what is important to them. They will then help them to produce an action plan, identify suitable activities and support in the community, and then support them to engage with these community assets (Thomas et al., Reference Thomas, Lynch and Spencer2021). Through engagement with this process, social prescribing can help individuals address concerns such as isolation, weight or health concerns, or financial worries, thereby providing them with greater control over their circumstances and well-being (Drinkwater et al., Reference Drinkwater, Wildman and Moffatt2019; Wood et al., Reference Wood, Ohlsen, Fenton, Connell and Weich2021). Individuals can access the same community-based activities and services themselves directly, outside of the social prescribing pathway, but this would not be considered to be social prescribing.
While the elements that constitute social prescribing are relatively consistent across the nations of the UK, each has its own definition (see All Ireland Social Prescribing Network, 2021; NHS England, 2023; Rees et al., Reference Rees, Thomas, Elliott and Wallace2019; NHS Inform, 2022). Within Wales, social prescribing is currently defined as ‘connecting citizens to community support to better manage their health and well-being’ (Rees et al., Reference Rees, Thomas, Elliott and Wallace2019). Wales has developed a cross-sectional model of social prescribing that is integrated with existing community and statutory services (Public Health Wales, 2018; Wallace et al., Reference Wallace, Davies, Elliot, Lewellyn, Randall, Owens, Philips, Teichen, Sulliva, Hannah, Jenkins and Jesurasa2021) and aligns with relevant policies, such as the Social Services and Wellbeing (Wales) Act (Welsh Government, 2014) and the Wellbeing and Future Generations (Wales) Act (Welsh Government, 2015). This model has moved away from the medical model of care, instead focussing on holistic and person-centred methods (Pringle & Jesurasa, Reference Pringle and Jesurasa2022) to help empower individuals to recognise their own needs and strengths and to connect with their communities for support with their health and well-being (Welsh Government, 2022).
Social prescribing has seen a period of proliferation and development over the last decade (Bertotti et al., Reference Bertotti, Frostick, Hutt, Sohanpal and Carnes2018; Morse et al., Reference Morse, Sandhu, Mulligan, Tierney, Polley, Chiva Giurca, Slade, Dias, Mahtani, Wells, Wang, Zhao, de Figueiredo, Meijs, Nam, Lee, Wallace, Elliott, Mendive, Robinson, Palo, Herrmann, Nielsen and Husk2022; Rempel et al., Reference Rempel, Wilson, Durrant and Barnett2017). The pace of this development has led to a lack of standardisation of several aspects of social prescribing, such as associated objectives, job roles, and outcomes, as well as the associated terminology (Rempel et al., Reference Rempel, Wilson, Durrant and Barnett2017; Wallace et al., Reference Wallace, Davies, Elliot, Lewellyn, Randall, Owens, Philips, Teichen, Sulliva, Hannah, Jenkins and Jesurasa2021). For example, social prescribing practitioners may have various titles such as link worker, community connector, well-being advisor, care navigator, or social prescriber (Carnes et al., Reference Carnes, Sohanpal, Frostick, Hull, Mathur, Netuveli, Tong, Hutt, Bertotti and Tong2017; Hamilton-West et al., Reference Hamilton-West, Gadsby, Zaremba, Jaswal, Hamilton-West, Gadsby, Zaremba and Jaswal2019; Tierney et al., Reference Tierney, Wong, Roberts, Boylan, Park, Abrams, Reeve, Williams and Mahtani2020; Wallace et al., Reference Wallace, Davies, Elliot, Lewellyn, Randall, Owens, Philips, Teichen, Sulliva, Hannah, Jenkins and Jesurasa2021; Wallace et al., Reference Wallace, Farmer and McCosker2019). The diversity and the lack of standardisation of the terminology associated with social prescribing are confusing for professionals and the public alike, impairing effective communication and creating barriers to engagement (Brown et al., Reference Brown, Mahtani, Turk and Tierney2021; Wallace et al., Reference Wallace, Davies, Elliot, Lewellyn, Randall, Owens, Philips, Teichen, Sulliva, Hannah, Jenkins and Jesurasa2021)
The Wales School for Social Prescribing Research (WSSPR) is a virtual all-Wales school that hosts the Wales Social Prescribing Research Network (WSPRN) and nests within PRIME Centre Wales. THE WSPRN has a diverse membership of over 350 researchers and professionals and supports three communities of practice, which feed out to members of the public and the social prescribing community across Wales (WSSPR, 2022). Through consultation with members of the public, the WSPRN identified a need for a reference tool to provide clarity on the terminology associated with social prescribing. Consequently, WSSPR and Public Health Wales committed to the development of an evidence-based glossary of terms for social prescribing in Wales (Newstead et al., Reference Newstead, Wallace, Jenkins, Lavans and Jesurasa2023; Wallace et al., Reference Wallace, Stone, Beeckman, Davies, Davies, Evans, Griffiths, Kenkre, Llewellyn, Lynch, Pontin, Powell, Roberts, Smith, Thomas, Vinnicombe, Wallace, Elliott and Rees2018).
Here, we report on the first stage of this process, the completion of a scoping review of the social prescribing-related literature, to identify, collate, and categorise the social prescribing-related terminology contained within the peer-reviewed journal articles of the UK and the grey literature of Wales.
Method
A scoping review was identified as the most appropriate form of literature review for this research, as the aim of the research was to map, report, and discuss the characteristics/concepts within a body of literature (Munn et al., Reference Munn, Peters, Stern, Tufanaru, McArthur and Aromataris2018), without assessing the quality of the included studies (Arksey & O’Malley, Reference Arksey and O’Malley2005). The scoping process incorporates a comprehensive search for information, guided by an a priori protocol (Peters et al., Reference Peters, Godfrey, Khalil, McInerney, Parker and Soares2015), and structured analyses of the literature (Davis et al., Reference Davis, Drey and Gould2009; Levac et al., Reference Levac, Colquhoun and O’Brien2010; Peters et al., Reference Peters, Godfrey, Khalil, McInerney, Parker and Soares2015). This may be an iterative process that requires reflexive engagement to ensure a comprehensive review of the relevant literature (Peters et al., Reference Peters, Godfrey, Khalil, McInerney, Parker and Soares2015; Peterson et al., Reference Peterson, Pearce, Ferguson and Langford2017).
Protocol
Our protocol was preregistered with the Open Science Framework: shorturl.at/jNY79. The protocol was based on the scoping review methodological framework proposed by Arksey & O’Malley (Reference Arksey and O’Malley2005), which employed a five-stage process (outlined below). It also incorporated the suggestions by Levac et al., (Reference Levac, Colquhoun and O’Brien2010) of including a numerical summary and qualitative thematic analysis to help identify the implications of the study findings for policy, practice, or research. As is common with scoping reviews, the process was refined as familiarity and an appreciation of the breadth of material was gained.
Stage 1: identifying the research question
Our research question was ‘What terminology is associated with social prescribing and the social prescribing pathway?’
Stage 2: identification of relevant studies
Peer-reviewed literature was identified by searching 11 electronic databases using a comprehensive list of 49 search terms that had been identified as relevant to social prescribing by members of the WSPRN and WSSPR steering group (a list of search terms and databases is available to view at shorturl.at/jNY79). Searches were conducted between 01/05/2021 and 30/06/2021 and were restricted by date (post-1980), language (English only), and location (UK). The location was set as the UK instead of Wales due to the absence of a Wales filter on some of the databases and the known influence of UK peer-reviewed literature language on social prescribing terminology within Wales. The types of documents deemed eligible for inclusion were peer-reviewed articles in academic journals including case studies, editorials, opinion pieces, studies, and experiments.
Welsh social prescribing grey literature was sourced from the Welsh Government, Welsh local authority, third sector, and university websites, identified using the search engine Google as well as recommendations from professionals associated with WSSPR and the social prescribing communities of practice in Wales. Grey literature searches were conducted between 01/03/2022 and 15/04/2022 and again restricted by date (post-1980) and language (English only). The types of documents deemed eligible for inclusion were guidance, reports, working papers, government documents, white papers, and evaluations and specialist magazine articles (e.g., specific to health or social care).
To further increase our information capture, snowball searches were conducted on all items deemed relevant. Items accepted for analysis were searched for additional references relating to our search, which were then subsequently sourced and examined.
Stage 3: selection of studies/literature
The selection of documentation for analysis and identification of social prescribing-related terminology underwent a two-step eligibility screening process:
Step 1 Screening: Titles and abstracts from peer-reviewed literature and the title and overview/foreword from grey literature were screened to determine if they held relevance to the nature of our search, i.e., do they:
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Include one of the search phrases in the context of social prescribing as defined by the involvement of a link worker or navigator who works with people to access local sources of support.
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Allude to the facilitation of an external community/voluntary service by means of an intermediary specialist.
We also included literature that referred to interventions known to occur in social prescribing but that had not fulfilled one of the above conditions in the abstract or foreword. These included: (1) physical activity programmes such as exercise, dance, guided walks, team sports, and cycling, (2). nutrition interventions such as diet clubs, food clubs, weight management, and diet therapy, and (3). psychosocial support such as social support groups, befriending, art-based activities, and green and blue space interventions.
Step 2 Screening: Details of all items identified as potentially relevant during stage 1 screening were recorded in a database, including items identified during snowball searches. Step 2 screening involved screening the text of each document for social prescribing-related terminology. This was defined as terminology that was explicit to, or associated with, social prescribing and the social prescribing pathway.
Stage 4: charting the literature and data
The data from items that were deemed relevant during step 2 screening were input into an Excel database to create a data charting form (by the first author, SN). The data that were collected are described in Table 1. As a quality control measure, 20% of the documents underwent independent step 2 screening and charting (by the team, DC, ME, ST) with periodic collation and consensus meetings to ensure that terms were not being overlooked.
Stage 5: collating, summarising, and reporting the results
The number of documents and terms was summarised by source (peer-reviewed and grey literature), the location of the research or intervention described within them, and the perspective from which the articles were authored. A general inductive approach (Thomas, Reference Thomas2006) was taken to categorise the various themes of the terminology identified from the scoping review; terms were manually coded, and the codes were then grouped to produce common themes. The database of charted data can be viewed at shorturl.at/jNY79. Charting the information from the articles identified in our research allowed us to present a basic numerical analysis of the information collated, as well as a narrative of our findings.
Results
All searches were examined in their entirety, except for those for the search of PubMed, which returned 2 341 050 items. The search was subsequently restricted to documents, reviews, and systematic reviews, which reduced the number of items to 290 000. We then used a function of the database to sort the remaining terms by relevance and examined the first 5000, as no potentially relevant items were identified after the first 4000 items indicating data saturation (Saunders et al., Reference Saunders, Sim, Kingstone, Baker, Waterfield, Bartlam, Burroughs and Jinks2018).
A total of 817 term data points were initially charted from 163 peer-reviewed documents and 42 grey literature documents. Following the removal of duplicate terms, 373 different terms were identified (see Fig. 1).
Distribution of the identified terms by source and location
The distribution of terms by source and location of the research/intervention described within them can be viewed in Table 2. Examination of the terms by source showed that 70% of terms (n = 260) occurred solely within the peer-reviewed literature and 20% of terms (n = 75) occurred solely in the grey literature, with a co-occurrence of 10% (n = 38) of the identified terms across both sources. A greater number of peer-reviewed documents were examined in their entirety and a higher number of terms were identified in the peer-reviewed literature than in the grey literature. However, examination of the average concentration of terms per article indicated a higher total concentration of terms per article in the grey literature (2.69 terms/article) than in the peer-reviewed literature (1.83 terms/article).
NB: () shows the average number of terms per document.
Further examination of the terms identified from the peer-reviewed literature, by the location of the research/intervention described within them (Table 3), revealed that approximately half of the terms identified originated from articles with a research perspective based within England, with approximately a further quarter originating from articles with a UK wide research perspective. The largest co-occurrence of terms was found within the literature from the UK and England. Peer-reviewed articles that described research/interventions in the other nations of the UK contributed relatively few terms. Only two terms co-occurred across the literature from all nations: ‘social prescribing’ and ‘link worker’. While a shared commonality in the terminology used by the different nations of the UK is apparent, there is also a clear distinction. Respectively, approximately 60%, 40%, and 33% of the terms used in the peer-reviewed literature of Scotland, Wales, and NI solely occurred in the articles produced by those nations.
One-third of the terms identified in the Welsh grey literature co-occurred in the peer-reviewed literature (Table 3). The largest co-occurrences were with articles that described research/interventions in England and across the UK. Only one term ‘time credits’ co-occurred within the grey literature of Wales and the peer-reviewed articles that described research/interventions in Wales. Again, only the terms ‘social prescribing’ and ‘link worker’ occurred across all nations and co-occurred within the grey literature.
Distribution of the identified terms by source and authored perspective
A total of seven authored perspectives were identified (Table 4). Articles authored from the perspective of psychology were only found within the peer-reviewed literature, and articles authored from the perspective of community and voluntary service organisations (CVSOs) and health, CVSOs, and health and social care were only found within the grey literature. Examination of the terms by source indicated that the largest contribution of terms originated from articles with an authored perspective of health and health and social care, within both the peer-reviewed literature (approximately 2:1 respectively) and grey literature (approximately 1:1 respectively).
NB: CVSOs = community and voluntary sector organisations, () shows the average number of terms per document.
Further examination of the terms identified from the peer-reviewed literature, by authored perspective (Table 5), revealed that approximately half of the terms identified originated from articles authored solely from the perspective of health. Approximately a further 20% originated from articles authored solely from the perspective of health and social care. The largest co-occurrence of terms (approximately 10%) was from articles authored from a health perspective and a health and social care perspective. The contribution of terms that occurred in articles authored solely or partially from the perspective of CVOSs was competitively small (approximately 5%). No terms co-occurred across the literature from all of the authored perspectives that were identified in the peer-reviewed literature.
NB: CVSOs = community and voluntary sector organisations, /indicates terms co-occurring in articles from different author perspectives.
Within the grey literature, the largest sole occurrence of terms was in articles authored from the perspective of health (approximately 20%). However, the contribution of terms that solely occurred in articles authored from the perspectives of health and mental health, health and social care, and CVSOs and health was relatively comparable. In general, there was a low co-occurrence of terms across articles authored from joint perspectives, and only the term ‘social prescribing’ co-occurred across the literature from all of the authored perspectives. However, in contrast to the peer-reviewed literature, the contribution of terms that occurred in articles authored solely or partially from the perspective of CVOSs was comparatively high (approximately 46%). The highest rates of co-occurrence with peer-reviewed literature were in articles authored from the perspectives of health, and health and social care.
Distribution of terms by source and theme
The identified terms were collated into nine themes. Table 6 provides a breakdown of the number of terms found within each theme, by source, along with example terms.
Several themes may require some explanation to fully appreciate what the themes encompass. The theme ‘essential elements of the practice of social prescribing’ includes terms that are widely described in the literature as being an important part of the role of the social prescribing practitioner and/or the social prescribing pathway, but that do not sit within the other themes. The theme ‘non-social prescribing practitioner roles’ includes terms that relate to the functioning and/or development of social prescribing in general and/or that describe roles within social prescribing that may administer aspects of social prescribing, but for which social prescribing is not their main role. The theme ‘measures of efficacy’ includes terms that are either specific measures of efficacy found within the examined literature or which relate to the process of establishing the efficacy of a service or intervention. The theme ‘broadly associated with social prescribing’ includes terms that do not easily sit within any of the other themes. The terms may be more specific to other services and/or sectors but may be related to, and/or encountered in, the practice of social prescribing more generally.
The theme ‘community-based activities and services’ contained the largest concentration of terms. The themes ‘essential elements of social prescribing’, ‘social prescribing practitioner roles’, and ‘broadly associated with social prescribing’ also contained relatively high concentrations of terms.
Examination of the terms by source indicated that the greatest concentrations of terms that occurred solely within the peer-reviewed literature were for the themes ‘community-based activities and services’, ‘essential elements of social prescribing’, and ‘broadly associated with social prescribing’. The greatest concentrations of terms that occurred solely within the grey literature were for the themes ‘community-based activities and services’, ‘social prescribing practitioner roles’, and ‘essential elements of social prescribing’. The four themes ‘the act of social prescribing’, ‘essential elements of social prescribing’, ‘social prescribing practitioner roles’, and ‘social prescribing models and approaches’ displayed relatively high levels of co-occurrence of terms across both sources. All other themes only had a single co-occurrence between the two literature sources.
Discussion
Through research and consultation with professional and public involvement members and social prescribing professionals within Wales, WSSPR identified a need for a means to help address the confusion for professionals and the public alike regarding the terminology associated with social prescribing within Wales (Evans et al., Reference Evans, Gallander, Griffiths, Harris-Mayes, James, Jones, Joseph-Williams, Nettle, Rolph, Snooks, Wallace and Edwards2020; Wallace et al., Reference Wallace, Stone, Beeckman, Davies, Davies, Evans, Griffiths, Kenkre, Llewellyn, Lynch, Pontin, Powell, Roberts, Smith, Thomas, Vinnicombe, Wallace, Elliott and Rees2018). To this end, WSSPR and Public Health Wales committed to the development of a glossary of terms for social prescribing, the first step of which was the identification and categorisation of the terminology associated with social prescribing. To the best of our knowledge, the scoping review described in this article is the first research to attempt to identify, collate, and categorise the social prescribing-related terminology found within the peer-reviewed literature of the UK. Terminology from the Welsh grey literature was also captured, and data were compared across both sources. Terms were collated and examined by the location of the research/intervention described within the articles, by the perspective from which the articles were authored and by theme. A total of 377 terms associated with social prescribing were identified. There was a much larger proportion of peer-reviewed literature than Welsh grey literature, and this was accompanied by a larger contribution of terms. There was an overlap of the terminology used in the peer-reviewed literature of the UK literature and that used in the grey literature within Wales. However, the present research also provides several examples of clear division between the two literature sources. Findings and implications are discussed.
The greatest contributions of terms were from peer-reviewed articles that described research/intervention from England or that were UK-wide. Peer-reviewed articles describing research/interventions for the other nations of the UK were comparatively low, which translated into smaller contributions of terms by these nations. One possible explanation for the disparity between the number of social prescribing-related journal articles for the nations of the UK is that the practice of social prescribing in England is more firmly established than for the other nations of the UK. England has already developed a framework for social prescribing practitioners/link workers (NHS England, 2023) and Wales is in the process of developing a national framework for social prescribing (Welsh Government, 2022). Comparatively, social prescribing in Scotland and NI may be considered to be in their infancy. This explanation is supported by the earliest dates of the peer-reviewed articles identified within this scoping review for each nation of the UK (e.g., England: Fox et al., Reference Fox, Biddle, Edmunds, Bowler and Killoran1997; Scotland: Cawston, Reference Cawston2011; Wales: Courtenay et al., Reference Courtenay, Khanfer, Harries-Huntly, Deslandes, Gillespie, Hodson, Morris, Pritchard and Williams2017; and NI: Loftus et al., Reference Loftus, McCauley and McCarron2017). The results also indicate aspects of both shared commonality and clear distinction in the terminology used by the different nations of the UK in the examined peer-reviewed literature. The co-occurrence of terms across nations likely reflects, at least in part, the general use of certain terms in practice. However, the relatively low contributions of articles from the other nations of the UK make it impossible to establish the degree to which the terminology used to report research/interventions in England has been adopted.
Examination of the peer-reviewed literature by authored perspective showed that the greatest contributions of terms were from articles authored from the perspectives of health and health social care. This predominance of the publication of social prescribing-related literature from a health or health and social care perspective may, in part, be reflective of a systematic bias for publication from these sectors. Research indicates that many CVSOs struggle to evidence their activities in the peer-reviewed literature (Breckell et al., Reference Breckell, Harrison and Robert2010; Ellis & Gregory, Reference Ellis and Gregory2008; Despard, Reference Despard2016; Mitchell & Berlan, Reference Mitchell and Berlan2018), due to a number of barriers including a lack of financial resources, expertise and internal capacity, and a mismatch between the requirements of those funding the service and what the CVSOs perceive to be appropriate evaluation goals (Bach-Mortensen & Montgomery, Reference Bach-Mortensen and Montgomery2018). Examination of the sole and co-occurrence of terms within the Welsh grey literature largely reflects a similar trend for the contribution of terms from articles authored from a health or health and social care perspective. However, the Welsh grey literature also demonstrated a much larger contribution of terms authored solely or partially from the perspective of CVOSs than was present in the peer-reviewed literature, which may be reflective of differences in the social prescribing models between the two nations. Social prescribing in England is heavily embedded in primary care (Frostick & Bertotti, Reference Frostick and Bertotti2019; King’s Fund, 2020). In contrast, social prescribing in Wales has moved away from the medical model of care (Pringle & Jesurasa, Reference Pringle and Jesurasa2022) and has developed a cross-sectional model of social prescribing that is integrated with existing community and statutory services (Public Health Wales, 2018; Wallace et al., Reference Wallace, Davies, Elliot, Lewellyn, Randall, Owens, Philips, Teichen, Sulliva, Hannah, Jenkins and Jesurasa2021) and that currently sits more firmly in the third sector (Elliot et al., Reference Elliott, Davies, Davies and Wallace2021).
Thematic analysis of the terms identified four themes. The results indicate aspects of shared commonality and of clear distinction between the terminology used in the examined peer-reviewed literature and the Welsh grey literature. The highest contributions of terms in both the peer-reviewed and Welsh grey literature were found in the themes that relate to the central aspects of the social prescribing pathway ‘community-based activities and services’, ‘essential elements of social prescribing’, and ‘social prescribing practitioner roles’. The co-occurrence of terms between the two sources was predominantly constrained to just four themes, the three aforementioned themes and the theme ‘the act of social prescribing’. However, levels of co-occurrence within these themes were also approximately equal to the number of terms that solely occurred within the Welsh grey literature. Each of the other five themes had only a single instance of co-occurrence of terms between the two sources. Surprisingly, Welsh grey literature contributed only a single term to the theme ‘non-social prescribing practitioner roles’. While it is beyond the scope of this research to ascertain, this observed disparity in the concentration of terminology across source and theme may be reflective of several factors: the prevalence and influence of English or UK peer-reviewed literature informing the terminology that is used with the Welsh grey literature of Wales (or vice-versa); and/or a lack of representation of Wales-specific social prescribing-related terminology within the peer-reviewed literature of terminology; and/or a failure of the peer-reviewed literature to accurately reflect the terminology that is used by the social prescribing workforce.
Limitations
The present research possesses several limitations. These are discussed below.
The scoping review was conducted on a subject that is constantly evolving and was intended as a first step in the production of a glossary of terms for social prescribing (Newstead et al., Reference Newstead, Wallace, Jenkins, Lavans and Jesurasa2023), which itself is anticipated to be a first step in the identification and clarification of the terminology associated with social prescribing. Future iterations of the glossary will likely be needed as the landscape of social prescribing evolves, and these will require additional research to capture changes and additions to the language associated with social prescribing. However, given the period between conducting the searches for the scoping review and publication, new terms may have appeared in the social prescribing literature. We therefore supplemented our scoping review with a review of social prescribing literature produced within the last two years. Using the same inclusion/exclusion as described for the scoping review, we identified 329 potentially relevant documents and examined the full text of 68 documents (references for examined documents can be obtained at shorturl.at/jNY79). Perhaps reassuringly, we identified just eight terms that were not previously captured in the scoping review: link worker pathway (Sandhu et al., Reference Sandhu, Tyler, Drake, Moffatt, Wildman and Wildman2022, link worker social prescribing intervention (Griffiths et al., Reference Griffith, Pollard, Gibson, Jeffries and Moffatt2023; Wildman & Wildman, Reference Wildman and Wildman2023), therapeutic community gardening (Wood et al., Reference Wood, Polley, Barton and Wicks2022), green exercise initiatives (Massey et al., Reference Massey, Denton, Burlingham, Violato, Bibby-Jones, Cunningham, Ciccognani, Robertson and Strauss2023), green poverty (Gerodetti & Foster, Reference Gerodetti and Foster2023), and animal-assisted activities (Howarth et al., Reference Howarth, Lawler and da Silva2021).
The terms used within the searches conducted for the scoping review were identified by members of the WSPRN and the WSSPR steering group, which contains a diversity of professionals that have contact with and represent a broad spectrum of social prescribing groups across Wales. While we are therefore confident that we identified at the very least, the majority of the most useful terms for the searches, we acknowledge that the decision to not contact external groups directly may mean that there are terms that we missed.
We acknowledge the limitations of the data from this research and that the inferences made from these data may not accurately reflect the representation or use of terminology by the workforce who encounter and deliver social prescribing, within Wales and beyond. It is likely that some terms used in everyday practice have evaded capture by the literature and by this scoping process.
Conclusion
This research, to the best of our knowledge, is the first to attempt to identify, collate, and categorise the terminology associated with social prescribing and serves to highlight the diversity of terminology associated with social prescribing and the lack of standardisation of terms that describe essential components of the social prescribing process. Terminology differs not only across nations of the UK but also across sectors. Such diverse and confusing terminology can hinder comprehension of what social prescribing is and what the pathway involves, as well as impair effective communication between professionals and with the general public (Husk et al., Reference Husk, Blockley, Lovell, Bethel, Bloomfield, Warber, Pearson, Lang, Byng and Garside2016; The King’s Fund, 2020; Tierney et al., Reference Tierney, Wong, Roberts, Boylan, Park, Abrams, Reeve, Williams and Mahtani2020; Wallace et al., Reference Wallace, Davies, Elliot, Lewellyn, Randall, Owens, Philips, Teichen, Sulliva, Hannah, Jenkins and Jesurasa2021).
The research indicates a bias of terminology originating from articles that examine research/interventions in England and that are authored from the perspective of health or health and social care. It is beyond the scope of this research to ascertain whether or not this terminology accurately reflects the language used by the workforce who encounter or deliver social prescribing. However, the research indicates that there are nation- and sector-specific terms that may not be adequately represented in the literature at large. Looking forward, it will be important to not only work towards standardising the terminology associated with social prescribing, across nations, and sectors of the UK but also to ensure that there is adequate representation of culturally relevant social prescribing terminology within the literature. To this end, more needs to be done to ensure that CVSOs, and the nations of the UK within which they reside, are able to report on the efficacy of their interventions within the peer-reviewed literature. Additionally, it will be important to ensure that the terms included in the literature do not solely come from literature sources but are also obtained from the workforce who encounter and deliver social prescribing.
The findings from this review represent the first step towards the development of an evidence-based glossary of terms for social prescribing and have laid the foundation for additional research. The development of the glossary of terms (Newstead et al., Reference Newstead, Wallace, Jenkins, Lavans and Jesurasa2023) has already been incorporated into the Welsh Government’s National Framework for Social Prescribing (due for release in December 2023) and their consultation document (Welsh Government, 2022).
Financial support
This work was co-funded by the Wales School for Social Prescribing Research, via Health and Care Research Wales, and Public Health Wales.