# Healthcare Utilization Following Implementation of a Pediatric Social Needs Screening Program

**Authors:** Ashley Gibson, Kaleigh Riggs-Harpur, Midhat Jafry, Mallika Mathur, Yen-Chi Le, Sandra McKay

PMC · DOI: 10.1177/21501319261428865 · 2026-03-18

## TL;DR

A social needs screening program in pediatric care reduced emergency and sick visits without affecting preventive care.

## Contribution

This study demonstrates the impact of universal social needs screening on healthcare utilization patterns in pediatrics.

## Key findings

- Post-implementation patients had fewer emergency visits (15.5% vs 13.1%) and sick visits (29.3% vs 24.3%).
- Well-child visits remained stable between pre- and post-implementation groups.
- Hospitalization rates slightly decreased but were not statistically significant (2.5% vs 2.0%).

## Abstract

This study evaluated differences in healthcare utilization among a pediatric primary care population following implementation of a universal social needs screening and referral program. It was hypothesized that emergency, sick, and hospitalization visits would decrease post-implementation, with stable or increased preventive care.

A retrospective, observational study was conducted using electronic health record data from 2 cohorts at different time periods at a large academic pediatric primary care clinic. The pre-implementation group included patients with a well-child visit from 08/2021 to 07/2022; the post-implementation group included patients from 09/2022 to 08/2023. Healthcare utilization measures of emergency department visits, hospitalizations, sick visits, and subsequent well-child visits were assessed from the index visit through the end of the group period. Differences in healthcare utilization were compared between cohorts using Mann-Whitney U (MW) tests, and associations of visit counts with social needs and care coordination referrals were examined using backwards-selected Zero-inflated Poisson regression models.

The study included 3889 pre-implementation and 3813 post-implementation patients. Post-implementation patients had fewer emergency visits (≥1 visit: 15.5% vs 13.1%; MW P = .002) and sick visits (≥2 visits: 29.3% vs 24.3%; MW P < .001). Well-child visits did not differ (MW P = .981). Hospitalization rates were 2.5% pre-implementation and 2.0% post-implementation (MW P = .120).

Implementation of a universal social needs screening program was associated with improved patterns of pediatric healthcare utilization.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** SDOH (MESH:D003643), food insecurity (MESH:D005517), housing instability (MESH:D018877), illness (MESH:D002908), ORCID iD (MESH:C535742)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Enterovirus D (no rank) [taxon 138951]

## Figures

8 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13009944/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13009944