Lay and Health Care Professional Understandings of Self-management: A Systematic Review and Narrative Synthesis
Overview
Affiliations
Objectives: Self-management is widely promoted but evidence of effectiveness is limited. Policy encourages health care professionals to support people with long-term conditions to learn self-management skills, yet little is known about the extent to which both parties share a common understanding of self-management. Thus, we compared health care professional and lay understandings of self-management of long-term conditions.
Methods: Systematic review and narrative synthesis of qualitative studies identified from relevant electronic databases, hand-searching of references lists, citation tracking and recommendations by experts.
Results: In total, 55 studies were included and quality was assessed using a brief quality assessment tool. Three conceptual themes, each with two subthemes were generated: traditional and shifting models of the professional-patient relationship (self-management as a tool to promote compliance; different expectations of responsibility); quality of relationship between health care professional and lay person (self-management as a collaborative partnership; self-management as tailored support) and putting self-management into everyday practice (the lived experience of self-management; self-management as a social practice).
Conclusion: Self-management was conceptualised by health care professionals as incorporating both a biomedical model of compliance and individual responsibility. Lay people understood self-management in wider terms, reflecting biomedical, psychological and social domains and different expectations of responsibility. In different ways, both deviated from the dominant model of self-management underpinned by the concept of self-efficacy. Different understandings help to explain how self-management is practised and may help to account for limited evidence of effectiveness of self-management interventions.
Soleimani N, Ebrahimi F, Mirzaei M PLoS One. 2024; 19(9):e0310961.
PMID: 39325734 PMC: 11426497. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0310961.
Shen H, van der Kleij R, van der Boog P, Chavannes N JMIR Form Res. 2024; 8:e48605.
PMID: 38869943 PMC: 11211709. DOI: 10.2196/48605.
Ma L, Lou S, Zhu X, Zhang R, Wu L, Xu J Patient Prefer Adherence. 2024; 18:1141-1150.
PMID: 38863947 PMC: 11166145. DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S462138.
Ghozali M, Satibi S, Forthwengel G J Med Life. 2023; 16(9):1299-1309.
PMID: 38107714 PMC: 10719786. DOI: 10.25122/jml-2023-0153.
An optimal model of long-term post-stroke care.
Sarzynska-Dlugosz I Front Neurol. 2023; 14:1129516.
PMID: 37034084 PMC: 10076665. DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2023.1129516.