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How is SelfCare defined in the literature

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Title: How is SelfCare defined in the literature


1
How is Self-Care defined in the literature?
Jones M, MacGillivary S, Kroll T, Zohoor A
2
Introduction
Hello
Self care - highlighted in the NHS Plan as a key
component of the model for Supporting People with
Long Term Conditions (Department of Health,
2005). Increase in interventions focused on
chronic disease management (Michie et al, 2003
Newman et al, 2004). There is a lack of
consensus about the meaning of terms such as
self-care and self-management and the additional
terms of self-management support.
3
Background to Scoping review
Hello
  • Modernisation agenda within NHS Tayside
  • Central nature of self-care, self-management to
    the Consortium
  • all that people, patients and carers do to
    maintain health, prevent illness, seek and adhere
    to treatment, manage symptoms and side effects,
    accomplish recovery and rehabilitation and manage
    the impact of chronic illness and disability.
    (ASCR, 2005 http//www.ascr.ac.uk/selfcare.htm).

4
Study Aims
Hello
  • To map the volume of the self-care and
    self-management literature in the last 10 years
  • To conduct a thematic analysis of the range and
    nature of definitions of self-care and
    self-management in chronic disease.

5
Methods
Hello
  • Three phases
  • Phase 1 search literature using key words
    self-care and chronic disease
  • map the ways in which the concept is currently
    understood and defined.
  • Phase 2 will be concerned with best ways to find
    self-care literature
  • map the volume and type of literature being
    published in this area.
  • Phase 3 will focus upon existing review
    literature and will describe the nature and range
    of interventions for enhancing self-care that are
    reported.

6
Phases 1 and 2
Hello
  • Phases 1 and 2 seek to answer the following
    research questions
  • How is self-care defined in the chronic disease
    management literature?
  • What is the volume of published self-care
    literature?
  • How has this changed over time?
  • Where is it being published?
  • What types of literature are being published?

7
Methods
Hello
  • Search multiple research literature databases
  • (MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, DARE, BIDs, the
    Cochrane Library)
  • Other sources of health related information
  • (Websites for Department of Health, National
    research register, Bandolier, Guidelines
    Update, HTA publications)

8
Self-care AND chronic disease
Hello
  • Specificity rather than sensitivity
  • 921 publications during last 10 years in all
    databases.
  • AZ and SM independently scrutinized abstracts
  • Purposefully selected 198 (20) for full
    retrieval
  • types of publication and study types (tutorials,
    reviews, RCTs, evaluation, qualitative etc)
  • disease areas (Asthma, diabetes, cardiovascular,
    stroke, dementia etc)
  • age group (children, adults, elderly).

9
Thematic analysis
Hello
  • Data extraction
  • Construction of a coding frame
  • Iterative process to refine frame
  • Application of coding frame to extracted data
    from 192 articles
  • Identification of dimensions within emergent
    themes
  • - P I (C) O

10
Findings A growing field
Hello
11
  • Self care
  • A multidimensional construct with definitions
    varying as to who is involved, why self care
    occurs, what is entailed, and how self care is
    accomplished (Becker et al, 2004).
  • Self management
  • Term first used by T. Creer (mid 1960s)
    self-management denoted the active participation
    of patients in their treatment (Lorig and Holman,
    2003).
  • Self-management support
  • a patient-centred collaborative approach to
    care that promotes patient activation, education
    and empowerment see p46 (Wagner et al., 2001
    Glasgow et al, 2001ab cited in Goldstein, 2004)

Hello
12
Self..
  • Self management
  • Self efficacy
  • Self responsibility
  • Self renewal
  • Self help
  • Self management groups
  • Self care management
  • Self advocacy
  • Self health care
  • Self efficacy
  • Self determination

Hello
  • Self healing
  • Self regulation
  • Self control
  • Self care agency
  • Self organisation
  • Self surveillance
  • Self report
  • Self measurement
  • Self monitoring/ blood pressure monitoring
  • Self treat
  • Self administration
  • Self medication

13
Why self-care is being promoted
Hello
  • Lessons from abroad (Dongbo et al., 2003)
  • Worldwide trend of people living longer and
    increasing healthcare costs (Clark, 2003)
  • Expectations of patients for greater involvement
    in healthcare (Baker, 2000)
  • Service redesign initiatives (DOH, 2004)
  • To protect patients from health services (Butler
    et al, (1979) cited in (Eales Stewart, 2001)

14
Who is involved in self-care? (P)
  • The individual in self-initiated activity
    (Artinian, et al, 2002)
  • The individual helping to support others
    (Beckingham Watt, 1995 cited in Ekpe, 2001)
  • Patient, families, communities in collaboration
    with healthcare professionals and healthcare
    systems (WHO, 1993 cited in (Becker, 2004)
  • Presence or absence of healthcare professionals
    (Becker, 2004)
  • Not including professionals (Clark, 2003) or
    excluding professionals (Eales Stewart, 2001)

15
Who is involved in self-management?
Hello
  • Patients, peers and support networks (Loeb et al,
    2003)
  • Patient and practitioners (Barlow et al, 2002)
  • Depression (Brown et al, 2001), Heart failure
    (Jaarsma et al, 2000), Asthma (Koch et al, 2004)

Who is involved in self-management support?
  • Patients, practitioners and the healthcare system
    (Lorig et al, 2001)

16
What self-care entails (I)
Hello
  • Intentional activity (Eales Stewart, 2001) or
    deciding to do nothing (Haugh et al, 1991)
  • Taking responsibility (Monsivais, 2005)/asserting
    control (Thorne et al., 2003 )
  • Managing emotion (Von Korff et al, 1997)
  • Behaviour action in context of chronic disease,
    e.g diabetes (Chang et al, 2005) and heart
    failure (Jaarsma et al., 2000)
  • Goal attainment and behavioural change (Hobbs,
    Wilson, Archie, 1999)

17
What self-management entails (I)
Hello
  • Self-determination/control and self efficacy
    beliefs (Kralik, et al, 2004 Koch et al., 2004
    Lorig, 2003)
  • Medical and Role management (Corbin Strauss
    (1988) cited in Neufeld Kniepmann, 2003)
  • Management of emotions (Barlow, Stuart et al.,
    2002)
  • Self regulation/self-monitoring (Nalagawa-Kogan
    et al, 1988)
  • Symptom management (Barlow et al, 2002)
  • Generic vs Illness specific behavioural tasks
  • (Clark et al, 1991 cited in (Gallant, 2003)
  • Individual versus group tasks (Barlow and Ellard,
    2004)

18
What self-management entails (I)
Hello
  • Generic tasks/activities
  • Patient education (Bodenheimer, 2003)
  • Unspecified behaviours/daily activities (Kralik
    et al 2004)
  • - Health promoting behaviours (Farrell et al,
    2004)
  • - Social skills training and support (Barlow and
    Ellard, 2004)
  • - Engagment with healthcare practitioners (Brown
    et al, 2001)
  • - Adherence to treatment ( Newman et al 2004,
    p20)
  • Religious coping (Dunn and Horgas, 2004)
  • Behaviour change techniques (including cognitive
    symptom management, cognitive behavioural
    techniques for changing maladaptive assumptions,
    problem solving, weekly action planning,
    modelling, self-monitoring, feedback) (e.g.
    Farrell et al 2004)

19
What self-management entails (I)
Hello
Illness specific beliefs and behaviours Self-mana
gement programs must be based on patient
perceived problems. In arthritis major
patient concern is pain, not disability (Lorig
Holman, 2003a 2003b) - Arthritis (Broom, 2003)
People SM even when pursuing remedies with no
known benefit - Diabetes (Fournier et al, 2002)
- Asthma (Koch et al, 2004) - Elder care
(Leveille et al, 1998 Loeb et al, 2003) -
Vascular management (Berna et al)
20
What self-management support entails
Hello
  • Key factors in chronic care management
  • Community resources, health care organization,
    self management support, decision support,
    delivery system re-design, and clinical
    information systems (Bodenheimer, 2003)
  • Provision of information and support to patients
    (and families) to better care for their illness
    (Epping-Jordan et al, 2000
  • Development of new skills, e.g. problem solving
    and goal setting, with the patient as a key
    resource (Bodenheimer, 2003)
  • Adoption of new behaviour (Michie et al, 2003)
  • - Self-care and self-efficacy (Farrell et al,
    2004)

21
What self-management support entails
Hello
Generic programmes - Chronic Disease Management
Programme (Lorig et al 1999-2003) - Chronic
Care Model (cited in Glasgow et al, 2004) -
Expert Patient Programme (cited in (Lewis
Dixon, 2004) Disease specific applications - Diab
etes (Lorig et al, 2003 cited in (Goldstein,
2004) - Heart failure (Chronic Illness Care
Breakthrough Series, Glasgow (2002)
22
Self-care versus? (C)
Hello
  • Self-care and medical care sometimes viewed as
    competing, rather than complementary strategies
    (Gruman VonKorff, 1999)
  • Medical self care versus health self care
    (Becker, 2004).
  • Medical care for chronic illness is rarely
    effective in the absence of adequate self-care.
    Self-care and medical care are both enhanced by
    effective collaboration among chronically ill
    patients and their families and health care
    providers (Gruman VonKorff, 1999)
  • Dangers of putting patient care into the hands of
    patients (MacStravic, 1997)

23
Outcomes of self-care (O)
Hello
  • Prevention of disease, limitation of illness and
    restoration of health. Improvement in the
    existing state of health which may be a chronic
    condition. Changes in lifestyle, maintenance of
    optimal levels of health (WHO (1983) cited in
    Eales Stewart, 2001)
  • Self care includes the actions people take for
    themselves, their children and their families to
    stay fit and maintain good physical and mental
    health meet social and psychological needs
    prevent illness or accidents care for minor
    ailments and long-term conditions and maintain
    health and wellbeing after an acute illness or
    discharge from hospital. (DoH A Real Choice Self
    Care Support).
  • Lifestyle changes (Barlow, Stuart et al., 2002)
  • Maintain a satisfactory quality of life Barlow
    et al 2002 (Barlow et al, 2002 Barlow, Stuart et
    al., 2002)

24
Outcomes of self-management(O)
Hello
  • Self-management has been described to minimize
    pain, share in decision-making about treatment,
    gain a sense of control over their lives (Lorig
    Holman, 1993, Barlow et al., 1999), reduce the
    frequency of visits to medical doctors and enjoy
    a better quality of life (Lorig et al, 1998
    Barlow et al. 2000). (Kralik et al 2004)
  • Self management of chronic illness refers to the
    daily activities that individuals undertake to
    keep the illnesses under control, minimize its
    impact on physical health status and functioning,
    and cope with the psychological sequelae of the
    illness (Clark et al 1991).(Gallant, 2003)

25
Outcomes of self-management (O)
Hello
  • Disease specific examples
  • Heart-failure related self-care behaviour (HF-SC
    behaviour) is the behaviour that the patient
    undertakes to care for himself to promote health
    and well-being. This definition includes
    behaviours such as adherence to medication, diet
    and exercise, but it also refers to behaviours
    such as seeking assistance when symptoms occur or
    weighing daily.(Jaarsma et al., 2000)
  • Self-management of chronic illness involves both
    the adoption of new behaviours (e.g., blood
    glucose monitoring in diabetes adherence to
    medication, etc.) as well as changes in existing
    behaviours (e.g., dietary modification).
    (Michie et al., 2003)

26
Outcomes of self-management support (O)
Hello
  • Generic
  • The programme improved weekly minutes of aerobic
    exercise, practice of cognitive symptom
    management, self-efficacy to manage own symptoms,
    and self-efficacy to manage own disease.
    Improvements in eight indices of health status
    and, on average, fewer hospitalizations. The
    programme improved participants' health
    behaviour, self-efficacy, and health status and
    reduced the number of hospitalizations six months
    after the course (Dongbo et al., 2003)
  • Disease specific
  • Improved skills, diabetes. Evaluation of an
    internet based patient education module, enabled
    patients to access their own records, upload
    blood glucose readings, enter medication,
    nutrition and exercise data into a personal diary
    (Goldberg et al., 2003)

27
Barriers to Self-Care
Hello
  • Self-care emphasises the importance of access to
    decision support for patients (Gruman Von
    Korff, 1999).
  • But there are barriers
  • Personal
  • Relating to practitioners
  • Lack of access
  • Culture
  • Social deprivation

28
Theoretical perspectives/ Classification systems
Hello
  • Orems 1985 self-care theory (cited in Artinian
    et al., 2002)
  • 5 As model of self-management support. (Glasgow
    et al., 2003)
  • Model for Effective Chronic Illness Care (Wagner
    et al., 2001)
  • WHOs International Classification of
    Functioning, Disability, and Health (Cited in
    Neufeld Kniepmann, 2003)

29
Hello
30
Theories applied to self-care, SM, SMS
  • Social Cognitive Theory including self-efficacy
  • Cognitive Behavioural approaches
  • Behavioural approaches
  • Problem-solving/goal attainment
  • Self-esteem
  • Consumer Information Processing
  • The Health Belief Model
  • Theory of Reasoned Action
  • The Stages of Change model.
  • Stress, Appraisal and Coping
  • Self Regulation Theory

Hello
31
Summary of definitions
  • Self Care - an overarching concept including SC
    undertaken by the person to stay well or managing
    chronic illness, with or without support from an
    healthcare practitioner. May also include SM and
    SMS
  • Self Management - managing the everyday impact of
    long term conditions. Involves the active
    participation of patients in their treatment
    (Lorig and Holman, 2003). Also involves, family,
    community in collaboration with peers,
    professionals and support networks.
  • Self Management Support - the help that can be
    given to help people maintain an active and
    engaged life and minimise their symptoms.
    Involves access to programmatic intervention, and
    additionally involves the healthcare system

32
Conclusion
Hello
  • The terms, self-care, self-management and
    self-management support are widely used and many
    definitions co-exist.
  • Need clarity of definitions and consistent use in
    intervention programmes in chronic disease.
  • Barriers to self-care have personal, professional
    and cultural dimensions
  • Need to explore the evidence base for self-care
    in chronic disease in areas of social deprivation.

33
Hello
m.c.jones_at_dundee.ac.uk
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