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The association between self-efficacy and self-care in essential hypertension: a systematic review

The association between self-efficacy and self-care in essential hypertension: a systematic review
The association between self-efficacy and self-care in essential hypertension: a systematic review
Background: the successful management of hypertension requires sustained engagement in self-care behaviour such as adhering to medication regimens and diet. Bandura’s Social Cognitive Theory suggests that self-efficacy is a major determinant of engagement in self-care behaviour. Self-efficacy refers to an individual’s belief in their capacity to execute behaviours necessary to produce specific performance attainments. This systematic review of observational studies aims to summarise and evaluate the quality of evidence available to support the association between self-efficacy and engagement in self-care behaviour in hypertension.

Methods: searches were performed of the Pubmed, MEDLINE, CINAHL and OpenSIGLE databases from database inception to January 2020. Reference lists and individual journals were also hand searched. Observational studies in English quantifying self-efficacy and self-care behaviour in hypertensive adults were included. The quality of included articles was assessed with the National Institute of Health Quality Assessment Tool for observational studies.

Results: the literature search identified 102 studies, of which 22 met the inclusion criteria for full-text review. There were 21 studies which reported that higher self-efficacy was associated with engagement in self-care behaviours including medication adherence (n = 9), physical activity (n = 2) and dietary changes (n = 1). Of these, 12 studies were rated as ‘good’ on the quality assessment tool and 10 were ‘fair’. A common limitation in these studies was a lack of objectivity due to their reliance on self-reporting of engagement in self-care behaviour.

Conclusion: our review suggests an association between self-efficacy and self-care. However, the evidence supporting this association is of low to medium quality and is limited by heterogeneity. Our findings suggest the need for further well-designed interventional studies to investigate this association.
1471-2296
Tan, Felicia Clara Jun Hui
7d6c0fea-83ae-4b0a-ae7d-fd1e2fcf5791
Oka, Prawira
0b85d97f-8bf8-45c2-8342-d06fa733a3f2
Dambha-Miller, Hajira
58961db5-31aa-460e-9394-08590c4b7ba1
Tan, Ngiap Chuan
31ac08b2-3735-4231-a46f-6eaca05308c4
Tan, Felicia Clara Jun Hui
7d6c0fea-83ae-4b0a-ae7d-fd1e2fcf5791
Oka, Prawira
0b85d97f-8bf8-45c2-8342-d06fa733a3f2
Dambha-Miller, Hajira
58961db5-31aa-460e-9394-08590c4b7ba1
Tan, Ngiap Chuan
31ac08b2-3735-4231-a46f-6eaca05308c4

Tan, Felicia Clara Jun Hui, Oka, Prawira, Dambha-Miller, Hajira and Tan, Ngiap Chuan (2021) The association between self-efficacy and self-care in essential hypertension: a systematic review. BMC Family Practice, 22 (44). (doi:10.1186/s12875-021-01391-2).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: the successful management of hypertension requires sustained engagement in self-care behaviour such as adhering to medication regimens and diet. Bandura’s Social Cognitive Theory suggests that self-efficacy is a major determinant of engagement in self-care behaviour. Self-efficacy refers to an individual’s belief in their capacity to execute behaviours necessary to produce specific performance attainments. This systematic review of observational studies aims to summarise and evaluate the quality of evidence available to support the association between self-efficacy and engagement in self-care behaviour in hypertension.

Methods: searches were performed of the Pubmed, MEDLINE, CINAHL and OpenSIGLE databases from database inception to January 2020. Reference lists and individual journals were also hand searched. Observational studies in English quantifying self-efficacy and self-care behaviour in hypertensive adults were included. The quality of included articles was assessed with the National Institute of Health Quality Assessment Tool for observational studies.

Results: the literature search identified 102 studies, of which 22 met the inclusion criteria for full-text review. There were 21 studies which reported that higher self-efficacy was associated with engagement in self-care behaviours including medication adherence (n = 9), physical activity (n = 2) and dietary changes (n = 1). Of these, 12 studies were rated as ‘good’ on the quality assessment tool and 10 were ‘fair’. A common limitation in these studies was a lack of objectivity due to their reliance on self-reporting of engagement in self-care behaviour.

Conclusion: our review suggests an association between self-efficacy and self-care. However, the evidence supporting this association is of low to medium quality and is limited by heterogeneity. Our findings suggest the need for further well-designed interventional studies to investigate this association.

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Accepted/In Press date: 9 February 2021
Published date: 22 February 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 485383
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485383
ISSN: 1471-2296
PURE UUID: 8cee886d-6900-48e0-8f50-5a4baf252de0
ORCID for Hajira Dambha-Miller: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0175-443X

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Date deposited: 05 Dec 2023 17:43
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:54

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Contributors

Author: Felicia Clara Jun Hui Tan
Author: Prawira Oka
Author: Ngiap Chuan Tan

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