Many things that affect our health cannot be treated by doctors or medicine alone, like loneliness, isolation or stress due to problems with debt or housing. Social prescribing connects people to non-medical support to address these issues and other unmet needs.

This could involve helping someone who is isolated to join a befriending group, an art class or a community gardening project, based on what matters to them. Connecting someone struggling with financial stress to a service that helps with managing debt or claiming benefits.

Working with someone with high blood pressure to take up a form of exercise that they’re comfortable with. Social prescribing involves understanding the complexities of people’s lives and the inequalities they may face. It can help change the circumstances that make people unwell, and empower people to manage existing health problems. It can help people to connect and to grow in confidence.

Podcast

Durham Community Actions’ health and wellbeing co-ordinator Susan Garrett about social prescribing in County Durham in a special podcast which also features Faith Walkwell, a social prescribing link worker for Claypath and University who talks about the role of social prescribing link workers.