| Literature DB >> 408301 |
L W Green, S H Werlin, H H Schauffler, C H Avery.
Abstract
Emergence of consumer health self-care is a reflection of the increased commitment of health professionals to patient education, growing consumer awareness that they are capable of sophisticated self-help, and a variety of social, economic and technological currents. These currents are reviewed and a survey of existing medical self-care programs is summarized. The attempts and potentials to evaluate these programs are critically examined. A number of important research and demonstration issues are raised including the determination of behavioral outcomes, technical limits, and manpower implications. A federal program of replicative studies on such issues would provide substantive knowledge in the self-care field, generalizable to the larger field of health education, but the hazards of undermining the voluntaristic and non-establishment character of the programs must be considered in designing evaluative studies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1977 PMID: 408301 DOI: 10.1177/109019817700500206
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Educ Monogr ISSN: 0073-1455