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Self-care for people coping with long-term health conditions in the community: the views of patients and GPs

Tessa Trappes-Lomax ( University of Exeter School of Sport and Health Sciences Exeter United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland )

Journal of Integrated Care

ISSN: 1476-9018

Article publication date: 12 March 2016

960

Abstract

Purpose

Long-term health problems put great pressures on health and social care services. Supporting ‘self-care’ has measurable benefits in helping patients cope better, but is difficult to do in practice. This review aims to help improve services by exploring existing evidence about the views of patients and GPs.

Design/methodology/approach

The search terms were identified following detailed discussion with service users. Five databases (PUBMED, CINAHL, TRIP, SCIE and PSYCINFO) were interrogated against pre-set questions and criteria. The data were managed in EndNote v6 and analysed in a series of Word tables.

Findings

37 community-based studies were identified, covering diverse chronic illnesses. Analysis of ‘barriers and enablers’ showed a very complex picture, with health systems often actively inhibiting the responsiveness and flexibility which support self-care. Directly seeking service user and practitioner views could shape more effective services

Research limitations/implications

Further research is needed into: the purpose and outcomes of user involvement, the relationship between integrated care and self-care, how patient motivation and resilience can be encouraged in primary care and the effect of current incentive schemes on self-care support Due to organisational changes, eligible studies were reviewed by one researcher only and these were mainly qualitative studies lacking generalisability. However, the results spanned a range of settings and health conditions. They are also clearly supported by later primary research findings

Practical implications

Several evidence-based, achievable opportunities to improve self-care support in primary care settings are identified

Originality/value

This service-user study, offers detailed analysis of what helps or hinders self-care in everyday life

Citation

Trappes-Lomax, T. (2016), "Self-care for people coping with long-term health conditions in the community: the views of patients and GPs", Journal of Integrated Care, Vol. 24 No. 2. https://doi.org/10.1108/JICA-05-2015-0019

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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