Sarah, a social worker in Manchester, spends her days helping older adults stay connected, arranging transport to community groups, and linking families with food banks. Lately, she’s noticed more patients being sent to “wellness activities” instead of getting direct support. “We’ve been doing this for decades,” she said. “Now it feels like someone renamed our job and gave it to a volunteer.”
She’s not alone. Across the UK, doctors are sending patients to gardening clubs, art classes, and walking groups instead of traditional care. This is called social prescribing—using non-medical activities to improve health. It’s meant to help people struggling with loneliness, stress, or mild depression.
But many social workers see a problem.
They’ve spent years building trust, assessing risks, and guiding vulnerable people through tough times. Now, they worry these efforts are being reduced to a referral slip.
Social prescribing sounds simple, but it’s stirring big tensions behind the scenes.
The Line Between Care and Activity
For years, social workers have been the bridge between health services and daily life. They help people find housing, apply for benefits, and stay safe at home. Their work is complex—it mixes compassion with legal duty.
Social prescribing, on the other hand, often focuses on lighter needs. A patient feeling lonely might be referred to a tea-and-chat group. Someone stressed might join a mindfulness class. These are good things. But they’re not the same as managing child protection cases or supporting people with severe disabilities.
Yet the lines are blurring.
Some clinics now have “link workers” who do what used to be part of a social worker’s job—connecting people to community help. These workers aren’t always trained in safeguarding or mental health law. But they’re handing out referrals that look a lot like social work.
It’s like having a handyman fix your roof when you really need an engineer.
A Role at Risk
A recent survey of 105 UK social workers found deep concern. Many said they support social prescribing—for the right people. They agree that not every struggle needs a formal case file.
But they also said: “This is what we already do.”
One wrote: “Isn’t this just social work without the training?”
The survey revealed four big feelings:
- Some saw social prescribing as a helpful partner
- Others feared it would take over their role
- Many said it only works for “low-level” needs
- Almost all worried about unclear boundaries
One worker said their manager now asks, “Can this be handled by a link worker?” before approving a social work visit.
That shift matters.
Social workers are trained to spot danger—abuse, neglect, crisis. Link workers often aren’t.
Who Gets Left Behind?
Here’s the catch.
Social prescribing works best for people who are just lonely, not unsafe. They can walk to a community center. They understand how to sign up. They have some support already.
But what about the woman too anxious to leave her flat? The man with dementia who forgets the group meets on Tuesdays? The family living in a cold, crowded flat with no help?
These are social work cases.
Yet when funding is tight, services may push people toward cheaper, simpler options.
That’s not bad intent. But it can mean the most vulnerable get less attention.
This doesn't mean this treatment is available yet.
From January to June 2022, researchers asked UK social workers about their views. Over 100 responded from all four nations. Most had heard of social prescribing. Many had referred clients.
But trust was low.
Some said link workers didn’t understand risk. Others said referrals were made without consent. A few reported patients being sent to groups that didn’t fit their culture, language, or disability.
One worker said a refugee family was sent to a “local walking group” despite not speaking English or having safe shoes.
These gaps matter.
Good support isn’t just about activity. It’s about dignity, safety, and real choice.
A System Under Pressure
The bigger picture? Public services are stretched.
Hospitals are full. Waiting lists are long. Doctors want quick ways to help patients who aren’t sick—but aren’t well.
Social prescribing feels like a solution. It’s low-cost. It’s positive. It gets people out of clinics and into communities.
But it can’t replace skilled support.
Think of it like traffic. Social prescribing helps cars flow smoothly on side streets. But when there’s a crash—on the main road—you need emergency crews.
Social workers are those crews.
If we send volunteers to handle every jam, we risk missing the real accidents.
What Happens Next
Right now, there’s no national rulebook for who does what. Some areas work well together. Others overlap or compete.
Experts say we need clear roles. Link workers should support—not replace—social workers. Training should include risk awareness. Referrals must respect patient needs.
More research is coming. But change takes time.
For now, the message from social workers is clear: We support help. Just don’t call our life’s work a “prescription.”
The road ahead means defining boundaries—before more people fall through the cracks.