“…Community-based prevention strategies, developed principally by social work prevention scientists, offer some of our most promising vehicles for successfully meeting this national priority (Hawkins, Kosterman, Catalano, Hill, & Abbott, 2005). Likewise, creating an affordable, high-quality health care system accessible to all will require combating the "upstream" social determinants of health that produce inequity (Gehlert et al, 2008), instituting effective community-based health and behavioral health promotion strategies, and creating culturally and locally tailored care-coordination practices (Andrews, Darnell, McBride, & Gehlert, 2013)-all strong focal points of the profession. The sustainability of the nation's health care reform and the nation's health may rest as much on the shoulders of social workers as in the hands of primary care doctors.…”