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Self-management support and training for patients with chronic and complex conditions improves health-related behaviour and health outcomes

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Version 2 2024-06-13, 09:22
Version 1 2008-01-01, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 09:22 authored by PW Harvey, JN Petkov, G Misan, J Fuller, MW Battersby, TN Cayetano, K Warren, P Holmes
The Sharing Health Care SA chronic disease self-management (CDSM) project in rural South Australia was designed to assist patients with chronic and complex conditions (diabetes, cardiovascular disease and arthritis) to learn how to participate more effectively in the management of their condition and to improve their self-management skills. Participants with chronic and complex conditions were recruited into the Sharing Health Care SA program and offered a range of education and support options (including a 6-week peer-led chronic disease self-management program) as part of the Enhanced Primary Care care planning process. Patient self-reported data were collected at baseline and subsequent 6-month intervals using the Partners in Health (PIH) scale to assess self-management skill and ability for 175 patients across four data collection points. Health providers also scored patient knowledge and self-management skills using the same scale over the same intervals. Patients also completed a modified Stanford 2000 Health Survey for the same time intervals to assess service utilisation and health-related lifestyle factors. Results show that both mean patient self-reported PIH scores and mean health provider PIH scores for patients improved significantly over time, indicating that patients demonstrated improved understanding of their condition and improved their ability to manage and deal with their symptoms. These results suggest that involvement in peer-led self-management education programs has a positive effect on patient self-management skill, confidence and health-related behaviour.

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Location

Clayton, Vic.

Open access

  • Yes

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2008, CSIRO Publishing

Journal

Australian health review

Volume

32

Pagination

330-338

ISSN

0156-5788

eISSN

1449-8944

Issue

2

Publisher

CSIRO Publishing

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