Understanding and Improving Older People’s Well-Being through Social Prescribing Involving the Cultural Sector: Interviews from a Realist Evaluation

Jordan Gorenberg, Stephanie Tierney*, Geoff Wong, Amadea Turk, Sebastien Libert, Caroline Potter, Kathryn Eccles, Shona Forster, Kerryn Husk, Helen J. Chatterjee, Emma Webster, Beth McDougall, Harriet Warburton, Lucy Shaw, Kamal R. Mahtani

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Social prescribing is a non-clinical approach to addressing social, environmental, and economic factors affecting how people feel physical and/or emotionally. It involves connecting people to ?community assets? (e.g., local groups, organizations, and charities) that can contribute to positive well-being. We sought to explain in what ways, for whom, and why the cultural sector can support social prescribing with older people. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 28 older people (aged 60+) and 25 cultural sector staff. The following nine concepts, developed from interview data, progressed the understanding of tailoring cultural offers, which came from our previous realist review?immersion, buddying, café culture, capacity, emotional involvement, perseverance, autonomy, elitism, and virtual cultural offers. Through tailoring, we propose that older people might experience one or more of the following benefits from engaging with a cultural offer as part of social prescribing?being immersed, psychological holding, connecting, and transforming through self-growth.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)07334648231154043-07334648231154043
Number of pages0
JournalJournal of Applied Gerontology
Volume0
Issue number0
Early online date1 Feb 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2023
EventJournal of Applied Gerontology -
Duration: 1 Feb 2023 → …

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