| Literature DB >> 28120168 |
Oladapo J Ogunbayo1, Ellen I Schafheutle2, Christopher Cutts3, Peter R Noyce1.
Abstract
Background Self-care support is an 'inseparable' component of quality healthcare for long-term conditions (LTCs). Evidence of how patients view and use community pharmacy (CP) to engage in self-care of LTCs is limited. Objective To explore patients' perspectives of engaging in self-care and use of CP for self-care support. Setting England and Scotland. Method Qualitative design employing semi-structured interviews. LTCs patients were recruited via general practitioners (GPs) and CPs. Interviews were conducted between May 2013 and June 2014; they were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim and analysed thematically. Results Twenty-four participants were interviewed. Three main themes emerged: engaging in self-care, resources for self-care support and (limited) use of community pharmacy. Participants' LTC 'lived experience' showed that self-care was integral to daily living from being diagnosed to long-term maintenance of health/wellbeing; self-care engagement was very personal and diverse and was based on beliefs and experiences. Healthcare professionals were viewed as providing information which was considered passive and insufficient in helping behavioural change. Non-healthcare sources (family, carers, friends, internet) were important in filling active support gaps, particularly lifestyle management. Participants' use of, and identified need for, community pharmacy as a resource for self-care support of LTCs was limited and primarily focussed on medicines supply. There was low awareness and visibility of CPs' potential roles and capability. Conclusion CP needs to reflect on patients' low awareness of its expertise and services to contribute to self-care support of LTCs. Rethinking how interventions are designed and 'marketed'; incorporation of patients' perspectives and collaboration with others, particularly GPs, could prove beneficial.Entities:
Keywords: Community pharmacy; Healthcare professionals; Long-term conditions; Patient perspective; Qualitative interviews; Self-care; United Kingdom
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28120168 PMCID: PMC5371633 DOI: 10.1007/s11096-016-0418-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Clin Pharm
Engaging in self-care—broad and specific themes and illustrative quotes
| Broad themes—aspects of self-care along LTC trajectory | Specific themes: engaging in a self-care activity | Exemplar quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Being diagnosed with a LTC | Seeking information after being diagnosed | I was in hospital for an asthma attack, a really bad asthma attack and it took ages to get over it and the doctors there said I had COPD but I didn’t know what it was then so I had a look myself what it was. (EP12 – 70 year old female with COPD and asthma) |
| Finding meaning and adjusting lifestyle to LTC | Yeah, when I was first diagnosed I pretty much stopped drinking completely because I was kind of misinformed really but now I started drinking a lot more, and I just monitor it. (EP4 – 26 year old male with diabetes) | |
| Managing physical health aspect of LTC | Taking/adhering to prescribed medications as a habit/ritual | Taking your medications, well, that just comes automatic now. Once you’ve been taking it for years its habit now, its habit and you know exactly what you’re doing. (SP4 – 77 year old male with asthma, CVD and arthritis) |
| Changing/modifying lifestyle to cope with physical demands | Well, I mean in the past I used to be very active and played tennis and hockey, but I haven’t done that for a long time. My husband and I fished, that was our hobby, but nowadays my main exercise is the garden. (EP5 – 85 year old female with asthma, CVD and diabetes) | |
| Symptom monitoring and management | I was in the supermarket and I was feeling horrible [hypoglycaemic]….I bought one of those little orange juices. I wouldn’t normally because it does shake your blood sugar up, but I drank some of that and the pure juice, of course it shoots your blood sugar up. (SP2 – 65 year old female with diabetes and CVD) | |
| Managing emotional health aspect of LTC | Staying positive and hopeful | I mean we all worry as we get older you know, we are getting nearer to the end you know [laughs]….But its, um, you know, when you see people that are sick, it’s upsetting, you know, um, when you are hoping that those kind of things don’t happen to you, but you know, nobody knows. (EP1 – 70 year old male with CVD and gout) |
| Seeking psychological counselling and support | Yes, when I was going through university, I did actually see a counsellor because one or two things became too heavy to deal with I did see a counsellor about the emotional side, but I must have only had about four sessions before I realised I can deal with this on my own… (EP6 – 26 year old male with a heart defect) | |
| Managing stress | Well, sometimes it [blood sugar] goes high, like, stress makes it just go up a lot, but, because I was very paranoid of going to sleep with low blood sugar. So, yeah, I’d say that my good control came probably, like, about four years ago when I started to realise how important your health actually is and if you just pay a little bit of attention to it, then it can be fine. (EP2 – 26 year old female with diabetes) | |
| Long-term maintenance of health and wellbeing | Making healthy lifestyle choices | I take the tablets and I try and take as much exercise as possible. I could do with losing more weight. I’ve stopped smoking a long, long time ago. Um, and am trying on having a reasonable diet, ye. (EP8 – 78 year old male with asthma and CVD) |
| Self-monitoring | Well, I’ve a fair idea, you know your own body better than anybody else and I have a fair idea of when I feel out of sorts and something isn’t right and if there’s something bothering me I won’t wait too long before I go to the doctor if it’s worrying me. (SP9 – 73 year old female with CVD and COPD) | |
| Healthcare utilisation | Yes. Recently, maybe two or three months ago, I was having hypos which meant I was in the supermarket and I was holding on to the shelf, because I thought I was going to [faint]. So I made an appointment to see the nurse and she said, you definitely have to see the doctor. As far as she was concerned everything was fine apart from that. So the doctor changed my tablets. (SP2 – 65 year old female with diabetes and CVD) |