%0 Journal Article %T Practice Capacity to Address PatientsĄŻ Social Needs and Physician Satisfaction and Perceived Quality of Care %A Angeli Bueno %A Emilia De Marchis %A Laura M. Gottlieb %A Matthew S. Pantell %J Archive of "Annals of Family Medicine". %D 2019 %R 10.1370/afm.2334 %X Recent studies have explored clinician impacts of health care¨Cbased interventions that respond to patientsĄŻ social and economic needs. These studies were limited by available clinician data. We used the Commonwealth International Health Policy Survey of 890 primary care physicians to examine associations between clinic capacity to respond to patientsĄŻ social needs and physician satisfaction, stress, and perceived medical care quality. Results suggest that perceived capacity to address social needs is strongly associated with both clinician satisfaction and perceived medical care quality. Our findings add to a growing literature on the potential return on investment of clinical interventions to address social needs %K social needs %K care coordination %K vulnerable populations %K acommunity/population health %K job satisfaction %K quality of care %K health policy %K professional practice %K disparities in health & health care %K practice-based research %K primary care %U https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6342584/