The benefits of successful patient self-management programs
From a 22 July KevinMD.com posting by Mark Novotny, MD
The emerging literature on chronic disease management suggests that successful programs rely on patient self management skills. Having been in the primary care role for 20 years, that initially seemed self evident and a bit “so what?” to me, thinking it meant that we just need to teach our patients a bit more in the primary care office.
However self-management skills refer to specific curricula of skills that can be taught to patients in formal programs, without doctors. Coordinating these activities with what goes on a primary care office, and the community, and other care-giving settings is critical. These specific skills involve patients setting their own goals, and then creating plans to reach those goals with the assistance of their primary care team and others, but not at the direction of their primary care team. This is a real mind shift for the primary care doctor also.
Related articles
- The benefits of successful patient self-management programs (kevinmd.com)
- Summary Box: Trying a new approach to primary care (seattletimes.nwsource.com)
- New Brief Outlines Strategies to Put Patients at the Center of Primary Care (jflahiff.wordpress.com)
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