• Title of article

    Advancing the Expert Patient?

  • Author/Authors

    Anne Rogers، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    167
  • To page
    176
  • Abstract
    The self-management of long-term conditions undertaken by people in their own homes has been attributed with increasing importance in health care policy. Interventions based on self-skills training have been introduced as a means of promoting and increasing levels of self-care practises in the population which have been informed by psychological models and concepts of change such as in the case of the national policy of the Expert Patients Programme (EPP) self-efficacy. Evidence to date suggests modest or equivocal effectiveness and there may be a number of reasons for this. One of the reasons is a failure to give due attention to the perspectives and work that patients themselves undertake in self-management interventions. Whilst the notion of an Expert Patient conveys a sense of what a new health policy centred on long-term conditionmanagement hopes to achieve, an important corollary is understanding the conditions necessary to accommodate and embed new techniques in the routine elements of illness ‘work’ undertaken by patients living with a long-term condition. This paper explores the health policy context of self-management, including the evidence and adequacy of the organizing concepts and outcomes associated with the EPP, and suggests that a greater focus on illness work and the social and domestic contexts is required in future innovation and research in the area of long-term condition management.
  • Keywords
    Self-management , Expert Patients , patient work , policy
  • Journal title
    Primary Health Care Research and Development
  • Serial Year
    2009
  • Journal title
    Primary Health Care Research and Development
  • Record number

    665071