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The experience of facilitators and participants of long term condition self-management group programmes: a qualitative synthesis

The experience of facilitators and participants of long term condition self-management group programmes: a qualitative synthesis
The experience of facilitators and participants of long term condition self-management group programmes: a qualitative synthesis
Objective: our aim was to systematically review the qualitative literature about the experiences of both facilitators and participants in a range of group-based programmes to support the self-management of long-term conditions.

Methods: we searched 7 databases using the terms ‘self-management’, ‘group’ and ‘qualitative’. Full text articles meeting the inclusion criteria were retrieved for review. A thematic synthesis approach was used to analyse the studies.

Results: 2126 articles were identified and 24 were included for review. Group participants valued being with similar others and perceived peer support benefits. Facilitators (HCP and lay) had limited group specific training, were uncertain of purpose and prioritised education and medical conformity over supportive group processes and the promotion of self-management agency and engagement. Overall, studies prioritised positive descriptions.

Conclusion: group programmes’ medical self-management focus may reduce their ability to contribute to patient-valued outcomes. Further research is needed to explore this disconnect.

Practice implications: this review supports broadening the scope of group-based programmes to foreground shared learning, social support and development of agency. It is of relevance to developers and facilitators of group self-management programmes and their ability to address the burden of long-term conditions.
0738-3991
2244-2254
Hughes, Stephen
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Willis, Karen
0c02e3e5-6e24-4a75-8a2d-3168eb86b390
Lewis, Sophie
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Rogers, Anne
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Wyke, Sally
ad68c72b-485d-48c4-b083-4eb59e09c79a
Hughes, Stephen
3e14ee79-db73-4e5a-8746-c7f3f30bfd84
Willis, Karen
0c02e3e5-6e24-4a75-8a2d-3168eb86b390
Lewis, Sophie
e033d675-061d-4ad4-a57a-95b4ccf4edcd
Rogers, Anne
105eeebc-1899-4850-950e-385a51738eb7
Wyke, Sally
ad68c72b-485d-48c4-b083-4eb59e09c79a

Hughes, Stephen, Willis, Karen, Lewis, Sophie, Rogers, Anne and Wyke, Sally (2017) The experience of facilitators and participants of long term condition self-management group programmes: a qualitative synthesis. Patient Education and Counseling, 100 (12), 2244-2254. (doi:10.1016/j.pec.2017.06.035).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: our aim was to systematically review the qualitative literature about the experiences of both facilitators and participants in a range of group-based programmes to support the self-management of long-term conditions.

Methods: we searched 7 databases using the terms ‘self-management’, ‘group’ and ‘qualitative’. Full text articles meeting the inclusion criteria were retrieved for review. A thematic synthesis approach was used to analyse the studies.

Results: 2126 articles were identified and 24 were included for review. Group participants valued being with similar others and perceived peer support benefits. Facilitators (HCP and lay) had limited group specific training, were uncertain of purpose and prioritised education and medical conformity over supportive group processes and the promotion of self-management agency and engagement. Overall, studies prioritised positive descriptions.

Conclusion: group programmes’ medical self-management focus may reduce their ability to contribute to patient-valued outcomes. Further research is needed to explore this disconnect.

Practice implications: this review supports broadening the scope of group-based programmes to foreground shared learning, social support and development of agency. It is of relevance to developers and facilitators of group self-management programmes and their ability to address the burden of long-term conditions.

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Accepted/In Press date: 26 June 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 July 2017
Published date: December 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 412091
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/412091
ISSN: 0738-3991
PURE UUID: bcc21063-e4df-42c2-956b-0270afb6650b

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Date deposited: 07 Jul 2017 16:31
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:31

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Contributors

Author: Stephen Hughes
Author: Karen Willis
Author: Sophie Lewis
Author: Anne Rogers
Author: Sally Wyke

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