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Behaviour change and social blinkers? The role of sociology in trials of self-management behaviour in chronic conditions

Behaviour change and social blinkers? The role of sociology in trials of self-management behaviour in chronic conditions
Behaviour change and social blinkers? The role of sociology in trials of self-management behaviour in chronic conditions
Individual‐focused self‐management interventions are one response to both an ageing society and the purported increase in chronic conditions. They tend to draw on psychological theories in self‐management interventions, but over‐reliance on these theories can reinforce a narrow focus on specified attitudinal and behavioural processes, omitting aspects of living with a chronic condition. While advances have been made in health behaviour change theory and practice, scant attention has been paid to the social, with the question of social context remaining under‐theorised and under‐explored empirically. This is particularly noticeable in trials of behaviour change interventions for self‐management. The common sociological critique is that these ignore context and thus no explanation can be given as to why, for whom and under what circumstances a treatment works. Conversely, sociologists are criticised for offering no positive suggestions as to how context can be taken into account and for over‐emphasising context with the risk of inhibiting innovation. This article provides an overview of these issues and provides examples of how context can be incorporated into the rigid method of trials of self‐management for chronic conditions. We discuss modifications to both trial interventions and design that make constructive use of the concept of context.
0141-9889
226-238
Ong, Bie Nio
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Rogers, Anne
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Kennedy, Anne
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Bower, Peter
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Sanders, Tom
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Morden, Andrew
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Cheraghi-Sohi, Sudeh
bd462e0d-2cc4-4428-810d-ace86af4689b
Richardson, Jane C.
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Stevenson, Fiona
881eb2a9-d7a8-449d-be50-ead6fda5cd3e
Ong, Bie Nio
f967326a-f5e0-4571-821e-57f44e726d02
Rogers, Anne
105eeebc-1899-4850-950e-385a51738eb7
Kennedy, Anne
e059c1c7-d6d0-41c8-95e1-95e5273b07f8
Bower, Peter
ec553157-a170-4219-8b55-2df813846e44
Sanders, Tom
254c24d2-c212-4fc4-a26f-5fc2b20f883f
Morden, Andrew
b2df376a-8870-4ade-a009-dfddb3aa82a0
Cheraghi-Sohi, Sudeh
bd462e0d-2cc4-4428-810d-ace86af4689b
Richardson, Jane C.
70047b12-019a-4326-acc5-dc202a5b4267
Stevenson, Fiona
881eb2a9-d7a8-449d-be50-ead6fda5cd3e

Ong, Bie Nio, Rogers, Anne, Kennedy, Anne, Bower, Peter, Sanders, Tom, Morden, Andrew, Cheraghi-Sohi, Sudeh, Richardson, Jane C. and Stevenson, Fiona (2014) Behaviour change and social blinkers? The role of sociology in trials of self-management behaviour in chronic conditions. Sociology of Health & Illness, 36 (2), 226-238. (doi:10.1111/1467-9566.12113).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Individual‐focused self‐management interventions are one response to both an ageing society and the purported increase in chronic conditions. They tend to draw on psychological theories in self‐management interventions, but over‐reliance on these theories can reinforce a narrow focus on specified attitudinal and behavioural processes, omitting aspects of living with a chronic condition. While advances have been made in health behaviour change theory and practice, scant attention has been paid to the social, with the question of social context remaining under‐theorised and under‐explored empirically. This is particularly noticeable in trials of behaviour change interventions for self‐management. The common sociological critique is that these ignore context and thus no explanation can be given as to why, for whom and under what circumstances a treatment works. Conversely, sociologists are criticised for offering no positive suggestions as to how context can be taken into account and for over‐emphasising context with the risk of inhibiting innovation. This article provides an overview of these issues and provides examples of how context can be incorporated into the rigid method of trials of self‐management for chronic conditions. We discuss modifications to both trial interventions and design that make constructive use of the concept of context.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 15 February 2014
Published date: 15 February 2014
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 368006
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/368006
ISSN: 0141-9889
PURE UUID: 5454a8a4-8d23-4d1e-ba2f-404349b436d4
ORCID for Anne Kennedy: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4570-9104

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Date deposited: 20 Aug 2014 14:46
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 17:40

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Contributors

Author: Bie Nio Ong
Author: Anne Rogers
Author: Anne Kennedy ORCID iD
Author: Peter Bower
Author: Tom Sanders
Author: Andrew Morden
Author: Sudeh Cheraghi-Sohi
Author: Jane C. Richardson
Author: Fiona Stevenson

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