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https://repository.monashhealth.org/monashhealthjspui/handle/1/57970| Title: | Educational standards for Australian social prescribing link workers: a modified Delphi study. | Authors: | Astell-Burt T.;Freak-Poli R.;Bissett M.;Baker J.R.;Feng X.;Teunisse A.K.;Zurynski Y.;Aggar C. | Monash Health Department(s): | Monash University - School of Public Health and Preventative Medicine Monash University - Monash School of Medicine |
Institution: | (Baker, Aggar, Bissett) Faculty of Health, Southern Cross University, Australia (Baker, Teunisse) Primary & Community Care Services Limited, NSW, Australia (Baker, Teunisse, Zurynski, Aggar, Astell-Burt, Feng, Bissett, Freak-Poli) Australian Social Prescribing Institute of Research and Education, NSW, Surry Hills, Australia (Zurynski) Australian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie University, NSW, Sydney, Australia (Astell-Burt) School of Architecture, Design and Planning, University of Sydney, NSW, Sydney, Australia (Astell-Burt) Westmead Applied Research Centre, NSW, Westmead Hospital, Sydney, Australia (Astell-Burt, Feng) Population Wellbeing and Environment Research Lab (PowerLab), NSW, Sydney, Australia (Astell-Burt) Charles Perkins Centre, University of Sydney, NSW, Sydney, Australia (Astell-Burt) Sydney Environment Institute, University of Sydney, NSW, Sydney, Australia (Feng) School of Population Health, University of New South Wales, NSW, Sydney, Australia (Feng) George Institute for Global Health, NSW, Sydney, Australia (Freak-Poli) Chronic Disease and Ageing, School of Public Health and Preventative Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia (Freak-Poli) Medicine Monash Health, School of Clinical Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia |
Issue Date: | 17-Mar-2026 | Copyright year: | 2026 | Place of publication: | Switzerland | Publication information: | Frontiers in public health. 14(pp 1754668), 2026. Date of Publication: 2026. | Journal: | Frontiers in public health | Abstract: | Background: Social prescribing integrates comprehensive health and wellbeing outcomes into routine medical care, addressing social determinants alongside biomedical treatment to support prevention and quality of life. In Australia, social prescribing is increasingly recognised in policy with the optimal model involving link workers delivering the intervention. However, no standardised educational framework exists for this emerging workforce. We aimed to develop consensus-based national education standards for social prescribing link workers through stakeholder consultation. Method(s): A modified Delphi technique evaluated draft graduate attributes and core competencies through online surveys, with experts rating agreement on 5-point Likert scales. Consensus was defined as >=80% agreement without critical revision needed as identified in qualitative feedback. Participants included Australian and international experts representing healthcare providers, academics, researchers, educators, and community organisations, recruited through purposive sampling. International experts provided benchmarking against established frameworks. Qualitative data informed revisions between rounds. Result(s): Round 1 involved 36 Australian and 11 international experts. Consensus was achieved on seven graduate attributes (Ethical Practitioner, Inclusive and Respectful, Effective Communicator, Critical Thinker and Problem Solver, Systemic Change Catalyst, Community Empowerment and Collaboration, Reflective and Lifelong Learner) and nine core competencies (spanning Australian health system navigation, community development, cultural safety, and evaluation). Round 2 (33 Australian, 10 international) achieved consensus on all revised items. Conclusion(s): These standards provide the first consensus-based framework for Australian social prescribing link worker education addressing unique contextual requirements while balancing comprehensive capabilities with practical implementation. The standards represent expert agreement on educational priorities rather than empirically validated outcomes, and require testing through implementation in training programs and practice settings, alongside planned qualitative research with community stakeholders.Copyright © 2026 Baker, Teunisse, Zurynski, Aggar, Astell-Burt, Feng, Bissett and Freak-Poli. | DOI: | https://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2026.1754668 | PubMed URL: | 41799462 | URI: | https://repository.monashhealth.org/monashhealthjspui/handle/1/57970 | Type: | Article |
| Appears in Collections: | Articles |
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