BACKGROUND: Existing literature on the design of interventions and health policy about self-management have tended to focus on individual-centred definitions of self-care and there is growing recognition of the need to extend consideration beyond individual factors, which determine self-care, to examine wider influences such as the health service, the family and the wider social context. AIMS: To explore the theoretical and empirical links between social networks, social capital and the self-care practices associated with chronic illness work and management in the context of people's everyday lives. METHOD: A realist review method was used to search and appraise relevant quantitative and qualitative literature. FINDINGS: The review findings indicate that social networks play an important part in the management of long-term conditions. We found that social networks tend to be defined narrowly and are primarily used as a way of acknowledging the significance of context. There is insufficient discussion in the literature of the specific types of networks that support or undermine self-care as well as an understanding of the processes involved. This necessitates shifting the emphasis of self-care towards community and network-centred approaches, which may also prove more appropriate for engaging people in socially and economically deprived contexts.
BACKGROUND: Existing literature on the design of interventions and health policy about self-management have tended to focus on individual-centred definitions of self-care and there is growing recognition of the need to extend consideration beyond individual factors, which determine self-care, to examine wider influences such as the health service, the family and the wider social context. AIMS: To explore the theoretical and empirical links between social networks, social capital and the self-care practices associated with chronic illness work and management in the context of people's everyday lives. METHOD: A realist review method was used to search and appraise relevant quantitative and qualitative literature. FINDINGS: The review findings indicate that social networks play an important part in the management of long-term conditions. We found that social networks tend to be defined narrowly and are primarily used as a way of acknowledging the significance of context. There is insufficient discussion in the literature of the specific types of networks that support or undermine self-care as well as an understanding of the processes involved. This necessitates shifting the emphasis of self-care towards community and network-centred approaches, which may also prove more appropriate for engaging people in socially and economically deprived contexts.
Authors: Anne Kennedy; Anne Rogers; Ivaylo Vassilev; Elka Todorova; Poli Roukova; Christina Foss; Ingrid Knutsen; Mari Carmen Portillo; Agurtzane Mujika; Manuel Serrano-Gil; Christos Lionis; Agapi Angelaki; Nikoleta Ratsika; Jan Koetsenruijter; Michel Wensing Journal: Health Expect Date: 2014-11-13 Impact factor: 3.377
Authors: Joshua R Novak; Jared R Anderson; Matthew D Johnson; Nathan R Hardy; Ann Walker; Allison Wilcox; Virginia L Lewis; David C Robbins Journal: Appl Psychol Health Well Being Date: 2017-04-12
Authors: Susan L Mills; Teresa J Brady; Janaki Jayanthan; Shabnam Ziabakhsh; Peter M Sargious Journal: Health Promot Int Date: 2017-12-01 Impact factor: 2.483
Authors: Jared R Anderson; Joshua R Novak; Matthew D Johnson; Sharon L Deitz; Ann Walker; Allison Wilcox; Virginia L Lewis; David C Robbins Journal: J Behav Med Date: 2016-09-30