Thank you for your interest in and involvement with the RIFS project. This project was a ground-breaking collaboration between primary care, public health and communities utilizing a collaborative approach to address income as a determinant of health within the Patient’s Medical Home, Health Neighbourhood, and the community, resulting in a stronger, more integrated health ecosystem for patients. We are grateful to the many teams who made the work such a success and continue to collaborate and take action to reduce financial strain.
With the formal RIFS project now complete, focus has shifted to enabling this work to grow and evolve in other clinics and communities. Visit the Alberta Health Services – Healthier Together website to learn more and stay up to date on the initiatives that result from this project.
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Easing financial strain vital to well-being
Share Easing financial strain vital to well-being on Facebook Share Easing financial strain vital to well-being on Twitter Share Easing financial strain vital to well-being on Linkedin Email Easing financial strain vital to well-being linkHealthcare teams aim to address financial worries as a barrier to health
Story by Danielle Griffith | Photo by Shawna McGhan
Think back to your last medical visit. You likely discussed a current health concern or how to remain well. But would you be surprised if your primary care team asked you about your financial health?
In 2019, a small group of Primary Care Network (PCN) physicians and nurses began to ask patients a simple question about their financial well-being — ‘Do you ever have difficulty making ends meet at the end of the month?’ The team screened for financial stress to determine what supports could help reduce the risk of further health concerns. In what’s come to be known as social prescribing, health teams also work to connect patients with benefits and supports in their local community, to things such as transportation, food, medication and access to technology.
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Breaking News: Financial Wellness Website Launched
Share Breaking News: Financial Wellness Website Launched on Facebook Share Breaking News: Financial Wellness Website Launched on Twitter Share Breaking News: Financial Wellness Website Launched on Linkedin Email Breaking News: Financial Wellness Website Launched linkThe Reducing the Impact of Financial Strain (RIFS) website has launched! The website is chalk full of inspiration and resources designed to assist clinical, primary care and local community teams take action.
Check it out here: Reducing the Impact of Financial Strain (RIFS) (healthiertogether.ca)
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Digital Story: The Snowball Effect
Share Digital Story: The Snowball Effect on Facebook Share Digital Story: The Snowball Effect on Twitter Share Digital Story: The Snowball Effect on Linkedin Email Digital Story: The Snowball Effect linkThis story is about how quickly a difficult financial situation can begin to snowball out of control and directly impact the health and wellness of people in our communities. Shelly's story emphasizes how important it can be for healthcare providers to be aware of how financial strain can impact the care they provide to patients and their families.
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Podcast about Reducing the Impact of Financial Strain
Share Podcast about Reducing the Impact of Financial Strain on Facebook Share Podcast about Reducing the Impact of Financial Strain on Twitter Share Podcast about Reducing the Impact of Financial Strain on Linkedin Email Podcast about Reducing the Impact of Financial Strain linkAlberta Doctors' Digest Editor-in-Chief, Marvin Polis, talks to Dr. Karla Gustafson, Project Lead of the Reducing the Impact of Financial Strain (RIFS) initiative and Medical Officer of Health, Calgary Zone about income as a socio-economic determinant of health. They discuss the Reducing the Impact of Financial Strain (RIFS) initiative.
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Change package and training available for Primary Care
Share Change package and training available for Primary Care on Facebook Share Change package and training available for Primary Care on Twitter Share Change package and training available for Primary Care on Linkedin Email Change package and training available for Primary Care linkThe RIFS Change Package and practice tools co-designed by AMA and the RIFS PCNs aims to helps physicians and team members implement practice changes that improve care for patients living with financial strain.
Training on Learn@AMA offers curriculum designed to help primary care physicians, clinical team members, and practice facilitators implement practice changes that improve care for patients living with financial strain. It will take approximately 3-hours to complete.
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Podcast: Socioeconomic determinants of health - Racialized Communities
Share Podcast: Socioeconomic determinants of health - Racialized Communities on Facebook Share Podcast: Socioeconomic determinants of health - Racialized Communities on Twitter Share Podcast: Socioeconomic determinants of health - Racialized Communities on Linkedin Email Podcast: Socioeconomic determinants of health - Racialized Communities linkAlberta Doctors' Digest Editor-in-Chief, Marvin Polis, talks to Dr. Gabriel Fabreau from Calgary about some of the socioeconomic determinants of health among immigrants, refugees, temporary foreign workers and other racialized communities.
During his interview, Dr. Fabreau mentioned an article in CMAJ entitled Implementing social interventions in primary care. Here is a link to the article.
Listen to the short podcast for some great insights and ways you can take action - Socioeconomic determinants of health - Racialized Communities | Alberta Doctors' Digest
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Understanding what matters to communities in planning healthcare services: A Framework and User Guide
Share Understanding what matters to communities in planning healthcare services: A Framework and User Guide on Facebook Share Understanding what matters to communities in planning healthcare services: A Framework and User Guide on Twitter Share Understanding what matters to communities in planning healthcare services: A Framework and User Guide on Linkedin Email Understanding what matters to communities in planning healthcare services: A Framework and User Guide linkWhat Would a Health-Creating System Look Like? Most health systems are designed to address illness rather than achieve wellness. Any organization that wants to improve health equity must fundamentally change the current system that produces disparities in health outcomes. Co-designed by health system partners, the Population Health Needs Framework and User Guide identifies innovative opportunities to improve the health and well-being of Albertans and their communities. By shifting our perspective of health AND co-designing with Albertans, we will improve population health and health equity. This innovative approach is being used by AHS Zones, Primary Healthcare, and community partners to jointly plan services across the continuum of care. Share how you identify social determinants of health, plan and take action to improve population health and well-being?
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Infographic Summary of Reducing the Impact of Financial Strain
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Take a Closer Look. The impact of financial strain on health.
Share Take a Closer Look. The impact of financial strain on health. on Facebook Share Take a Closer Look. The impact of financial strain on health. on Twitter Share Take a Closer Look. The impact of financial strain on health. on Linkedin Email Take a Closer Look. The impact of financial strain on health. linkRIFS Project Infographic.
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McLeod River PCN RIFS team recognized for improving health journeys
Share McLeod River PCN RIFS team recognized for improving health journeys on Facebook Share McLeod River PCN RIFS team recognized for improving health journeys on Twitter Share McLeod River PCN RIFS team recognized for improving health journeys on Linkedin Email McLeod River PCN RIFS team recognized for improving health journeys linkOne of the teams working on the Reducing the Impacts of Financial Strain (RIFS) project has received a Patient Experience Award from the Health Quality Council of Alberta.
This annual award goes to initiatives that improve the way patients receive healthcare services. It’s a daunting mandate, but RIFS fits the bill perfectly. Since income is one of the most powerful determinants of health, RIFS has enormous potential to give people in Alberta a better experience throughout their health journeys.
The award recognizes the contributions of one RIFS team, the Life Medical Clinic and the McLeod River Primary Care Network (PCN). They embedded screening questions that uncover the patient’s full picture, open up life-changing conversations and establish relevant community connections.
Asking a simple question like, “Do you ever have trouble making ends meet?” can spark dialogue that helps providers get a holistic view of the patient and use a broader socio-economic context to offer support. Providers can then connect patients to the right community services at the right time.
Informing this work was a collaborative effort by the RIFS team to understand what matters most to the patient and how their social needs impact their health. The end goal? To create a safe space for conversations about finances and health.
A key member of the team, Dr. Joseph Ojedokun of the McLeod River PCN, echoes the importance of open conversations about contextual issues like financial strain: “Ask what matters. Listen to what matters. Do what matters.”
Not surprisingly, this multidisciplinary project is backed by a diverse team, including the AHS Provincial Population and Public Health (PPPH) and Primary Health Care programs and their Strategic Clinical and Integration (PHC IN) Networks, and the Alberta Medical Association (AMA).
The clinic and PCN together with Zone level Public Health was part of a community-based multi-sectoral team that mapped out and engaged with local agencies that could provide appropriate support for each patient and for community members who may not be accessing the health system.
This team also co-designed actions that mobilized community partners to collectively identify local assets and respond to local needs, such as partnering with the local library to provide equal access to Wi-Fi and a computer lending program that aims to facilitate citizens accessing benefits, services and/or employment opportunities that promote financial wellbeing.
The RIFS project has now been piloted by three PCN-Zone-Community sites: McLeod River (North Zone), St. Albert Sturgeon (Edmonton Zone) and Kalyna Country (Central Zone). The project was co-designed locally with each clinic, PCN and community partnership.
We invite you to watch the RIFS digital stories and discuss with your team: Tara's and Lacey's narratives were developed by the Life Medical Clinic and the McLeod River PCN. You’ll see how reducing financial strain, in partnership with community, can change patients’ lives for the better.
You can also listen to Tara, Lacey and Dr. Joseph share their experiences as part of a panel of presenters in the ChangeMaker webinar. Join us in congratulating this team for their Patient Experience Award!