Self-management education: History, definition, outcomes, and mechanisms

Kate Lorig(Stanford Health Care), Halsted R. Holman(Stanford University)
Annals of Behavioral Medicine
August 1, 2003
Cited by 4,110

Abstract

Self-management has become a popular term for behavioral interventions as well as for healthful behaviors. This is especially true for the management of chronic conditions. This article offers a short history of self-management. It presents three self-management tasks--medical management, role management, and emotional management--and six self-management skills--problem solving, decision making, resource utilization, the formation of a patient-provider partnership, action planning, and self-tailoring. In addition, the article presents evidence of the effectiveness of self-management interventions and posits a possible mechanism, self-efficacy, through which these interventions work. In conclusion the article discusses problems and solutions for integrating self-management education into the mainstream health care systems.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis