| Literature DB >> 18854033 |
Gonzalo Grandes1, Alvaro Sanchez, Josep M Cortada, Laura Balague, Carlos Calderon, Arantza Arrazola, Itziar Vergara, Eduardo Millan.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The adoption of a healthy lifestyle, including physical activity, a healthy diet, moderate alcohol consumption and abstinence from smoking, is associated with a major decrease in the incidence of chronic diseases and mortality. Primary health-care (PHC) services therefore attempt, with rather limited success, to promote such lifestyles in their patients. The objective of the present study is to ascertain the perceptions of clinicians and researchers within the Basque Health System of the factors that hinder or facilitate the integration of healthy lifestyle promotion in routine PHC setting.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18854033 PMCID: PMC2577098 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-8-213
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Summary of the main theoretical models of behavioural change in primary care
| Health Belief Model [ | Healthy behaviour is the result of perception of disease susceptibility and severity, perception of the benefits of the behaviour required for disease avoidance or management, exposure to stimuli promoting the action, and personal confidence in the capacity to successfully implement the behaviour. | Perceived susceptibility |
| Theory of Reasoned/Planned Action | Behavioural intention determines the performance of a given behaviour through the influence exerted by beliefs, attitudes, subjective norms and perceived control on intention and behaviour itself. | Behavioural intention |
| Information Processing Model [ | The capacity of the person to understand and react to information and communication sources influences his/her behaviour. | Who provides the information |
| Transtheoretical Model of Stages of Change [ | Willingness or intention to change behaviour varies among individuals and within an individual over time. Relapse is a common event and part of the change process. | Stages of change: (1) Precontemplation, (2) Contemplation, (3) Preparation, (4) Action, (5) Maintenance. Change processes: Cognitive and behavioural; Self-efficacy |
| Precaution adoption process [ | Adoption of a new behaviour requires a process, consisting of 7 stages or steps, from ignorance of the problem, through the decision to perform the action, to the final change in behaviour. | Stages: (1) No risk awareness; (2) Aware of risk, but considers oneself not susceptible to it; |
| Operating Learning Model [ | The probability of performing a behaviour is dictated by the history of consequences (environmental changes, stimuli) contingent to its performance. Behaviours should be defined based on the variables that control them: antecedents (stimulus situation prior to behaviour performance) and consequences (change in environment or stimulus situation immediate to behaviour performance). | Antecedent stimuli; Consequences; Reinforcement principle (positive or negative reinforcement); Principle of punishment (positive or negative punishment); Stimulus control; Reinforcing cultural contingencies |
| Social Learning or Social-Cognitive Model [ | Behaviour is dictated by dynamic interaction of personal factors, environmental influences and behaviour: reciprocal determinism. | Observational learning |
| Self-regulation models [ | Effectiveness in long-term behavioural change depends on the degree of control the individual has on his/her process of change. | Self-management skills; Self-monitoring; Self-evaluation; Self-reinforcement |
| Interpersonal and social support theories [ | Effective interpersonal communication between the provider and patient, taking into account the significance of the environment surrounding the individual, is essential for the change to occur. | Informative support |
| Community-based intervention approach [ | Community well-being may be promoted by identification of common problems and objectives, resource mobilisation and development and implementation of strategies to reach such collective objectives, including the creation of structures and policies supporting healthy practices and lifestyles. | |
Intervention components associated wit modification of lifestyle behaviours in primary care setting
| Physical activity | Combining advice from the family physician with behavioural interventions such as: goal-setting for the patient, written prescriptions and physical activity regimens adapted to the individual, multiple follow-up contacts by telephone or mail, performed by trained staff, linking or referring to physical activity resources in the community or to exercise programs. |
| Diet | Combining advice from the family physician with assistance systems at the primary care centre such as advice algorithms, warning or reminding mechanisms, interactive communication media (tailored emails, telephone advice) and group interventions. At the patient level, goal-setting, provision of feedback and behavioural reinforcement, education on nutrition and diet, support materials such as food acquisition and preparation guides, self-monitoring techniques, training to overcome barriers in healthy food selection, social support networks or resources. |
| Smoking | Counselling or therapeutic interventions for motivated patients related to problem solving, skills training, relapse prevention, stress management, multiple follow-up contacts and intervention in the smoker's environment to increase social support and enhance the effect of brief counselling. For those who have ceased smoking, relapse prevention strategies. For patients unprepared or with no intention to change, counselling and intensive motivational interventions are recommended. |
| Alcohol | Combining therapeutic counselling by the family physician with multiple contacts, feedback, goal-setting, support at system level, particularly with regard to initial patient evaluation, and in some cases reminder or warning systems, provision of support materials. Motivational interviewing for alcohol dependents. |
| Multiple risk behaviours* | Evaluation of patient characteristics and needs and subsequent adaptation of intervention elements based on the evaluation, interactive education and skills promotion, self-monitoring, goal-setting, barrier identification and problem solving, use of multidisciplinary teams or nursing-based schemes and support systems in the centres such as reminder systems facilitating identification and multiple follow-up contacts. |
* Based on the findings in secondary prevention studies, which may be generalised to the primary care context.
Summary of proposals to enhance integration of healthy lifestyle promotion into PHC
| 1.- Increase availability of resources |
| • Increase the interaction time between patients and professionals in order to open their work agendas to health promotion: |
| - review care protocols for healthy people |
| - decrease checks for people with chronic diseases, promoting patient self-control and autonomy |
| - expressly prioritise health promotion activities and the reminding and recording of such activities |
| - effective administrative support to free practitioners from administrative and bureaucratic tasks |
| - communication, task redistribution, coordination and mutual support between physicians and nurses. |
| • Health policies defining the role of PHC in health promotion. |
| • Agreements between funding bodies and service providers specifically stating health promotion objectives, resources and indicators for evaluation. |
| • Participation of professionals in planning and quality evaluation of PHC services: |
| - promote communication within the health-care system |
| - establish common health promotion objectives for all professionals in the health-care organisation |
| - negotiate evaluation indicators shared by all groups. |
| • Actions at an inter-institutional level: town councils, schools, health-care centres, citizens' organisations, etc. |
| - designate a health promotion coordinator post at district or town level |
| - integrate initiatives and resources of the different sectors involved. |
| 2.- Design of intervention programs |
| • Review their rationale based on scientific evidence of their effectiveness. |
| • Promote research into health promotion in PHC. |
| • Prioritise programs that are more flexible and adaptable to context. |
| • Participation of clinicians and researchers in the design and evaluation of new interventions. |
| • Use new support and reminder tools that do not interfere with the clinical practice of professionals. |
| • Take advantage of the new technologies for citizen information and education. |
| 3.- Program dissemination |
| • Fight against resistance to change using outcome research. |
| • Set up a network of centres particularly interested in innovation for addressing multiple risk factors in PHC. |
| • Experience-based training and action-oriented skills. |