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1 vity, weight-loss, education and support for self-management.
2 t with health care is associated with better self-management.
3  extend current conceptualisations of stroke self-management.
4  effort to gather helpful advice for ECRs in self-management.
5 facilitators, and barriers of multimorbidity self-management.
6 fessionals in the counseling of patients for self-management.
7 ot confident about various areas of diabetes self-management.
8 to encourage patient behaviours that improve self-management.
9 xiogenic cognitions that undermine effective self-management.
10 nd behavior regarding their eventual disease self-management.
11 ple with dementia that require an element of self-management.
12 motivation alone is not optimal in promoting self-management.
13 n the process and role of motivation in pain self-management.
14 <0.001) of organisations concerning diabetes self-management.
15 d professional roles were enacted to support self-management.
16 ents to assume more responsibility for their self-management.
17 fer between groups, apart from leg swelling (self-management, 74 patients [32%]; control, 55 patients
18           To optimise engagement, choice and self management a booklet and website were developed to
19   There was no association between patients' self-management ability and HRQoL at baseline.
20 tudy suggests that the increase in patients' self-management ability may lead to improvement in HRQoL
21 HRQoL, patient-professional partnerships and self-management ability were collected at baseline and t
22 crease in physical activity; improved asthma self-management; acquisition of street and fire safety s
23 ther exploration, participants described how self-management activities were helped or hindered.
24 ions could be an effective tool in promoting self-management, adherence to guideline-directed therapy
25  and complications, knowledge of medication, self-management, adherence to medication, and understand
26 to adherence and foster positive views about self-management, adolescents suggested that their peers
27 e symptom management intervention to improve self-management among long-term survivors of prostate ca
28 idence that patients have for key aspects of self management and further research is needed to addres
29 orting in near real time, supporting patient self-management and allowing rapid remote identification
30   Anticipating poor recovery due to impaired self-management and appointment-keeping, clinicians may
31 requisite shift to proactive care, supported self-management and collaborative management if patient'
32 ith heart failure, a condition that requires self-management and frequent interactions with the healt
33 e support they received, and improvements in self-management and health literacy.
34 hma action plans are essential for improving self-management and outcomes.
35 tes management can improve diabetes care and self-management and prevent eye complications.
36 ntions; effective ways to engage patients in self-management and promote long-term behavior change; s
37 rticipants would have more confident symptom self-management and reduced symptom burden.
38 rs with such information increases effective self-management and satisfaction.
39 owledge of and engagement in chronic disease self-management and self-care.
40 management: Individual capacity; support for self-management and self-management environment.
41  of the problem-solving processes underlying self-management and the relationship of these processes
42 chological and behavioural factors including self-management and treatment adherence, and therefore,
43 he literature on interventions for improving self-management and well-being in adolescents and young
44 cer Index Composite-26 [EPIC], confidence in self-management) and secondary outcomes between groups u
45 identify patterns in individual processes of self-management, and among teens in general..
46 ce, mitigating multidomain risks, augmenting self-management, and creating a collaborative relationsh
47  therapies such as pulmonary rehabilitation, self-management, and home ventilatory support are becomi
48 ner interventions, behavioral interventions, self-management, and provider care.
49 ws to identify reviews of patient education, self-management, and self-care studies.
50 owledge, perceived self-efficacy of diabetes self-management, and self-management behaviors.
51  vs primary care), self-testing alone versus self-management, and sex.
52 ing the family in assisting AYA to undertake self-management; and (e) encouraging AYA to let their fr
53 ervention details, including 6 components of self-management; and outcomes, which were verified by a
54  Prior evidence suggests that medication and self-management approaches to care can improve symptoms,
55 igned to reduce distress and improve disease self-management are needed.
56 self-care activities, and act as proxies for self-management, as dementia progresses.
57 e studies describing the self-management (or self-management assisted by family carers) of long-term
58 or vascular access, and education to support self-management at every contact.
59 nding of the condition, symptom experiences, self-management, attitude to treatment, healthcare exper
60 alance of an exclusively individual focus on self-management because it addresses the broader set of
61          Education-based approaches improved self-management behaviors (standardized mean difference,
62  a leading cause of pain and disability, and self-management behaviors for osteoarthritis are underut
63 ssess the effect of patient characteristics, self-management behaviors, and communication factors on
64 ed with worse perceived self-efficacy, fewer self-management behaviors, and possibly poorer glycemic
65  to medications and limiting other effective self-management behaviors.
66 ed understanding motivational factors key to self-management behaviors.
67  lower perceived self-efficacy, and selected self-management behaviors.
68 lf-efficacy of diabetes self-management, and self-management behaviors.
69 o explore experiences with asthma, symptoms, self-management behaviours, and relationship to asthma c
70 iduals with CMDs seem to be using nature for self-management, but 'green prescription' programmes nee
71         eHealth has the potential to support self-management, but evidence in solid organ transplanta
72 port discussions about health care needs and self-management, but few are addressing critical aspects
73 reported performance of supporting patients' self-management by final year nursing students, and pers
74                  This study assessed whether self-management by people with poorly controlled hyperte
75               We used patient-centered care, self-management, coaching, and a behavior change wheel a
76 th or the Iraq War were randomly assigned to self-management cognitive behavior therapy (N=24) or sup
77                                              Self-management cognitive behavior therapy may be a way
78 ation programmes that integrate exercise and self-management components might be more effective.
79 nts were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to self-management, consisting of self-monitoring of blood
80                            Successful stroke self-management consists of features which may be modifi
81 eer group-based intervention group (IG) or a self-management control group (CG) for 12 months.
82 cational intervention alone, the addition of self-management counseling did not reduce death or heart
83               Their repertoire of behavioral self-management did not include two key treatments and i
84   A patient's perceived barriers to diabetes self-management (DSM) may affect his or her risk of diab
85 ysis showed that most lifestyle and diabetes self-management education and support programs (usually
86 of these targeted both care coordination and self-management education but ultimately did not improve
87   Usual care versus in-hospital, one-on-one, self-management education given by a dedicated language-
88 iabetes During Ramadan Conversation Map is a self-management education group-based intervention for M
89                         HVs with emphasis on self-management education might be necessary to facilita
90                                     Diabetes self-management education offering 10 or fewer hours of
91             Over the past 20 years, diabetes self-management education programmes have been shown to
92                                     Diabetes self-management education programmes, developed robustly
93 moglobin A1c [HbA1c]), whereas most diabetes self-management education programs without added support
94                                              Self-management education should be tailored to specific
95          Nurses are the primary providers of self-management education, yet there have been few attem
96 sthma, with a focus on care coordination and self-management education.
97 ants were not using water-based exercise and self-management education.
98 y relevant from a public health perspective: self-management (eg, web-based psychological therapy for
99 al capacity; support for self-management and self-management environment.
100  are actually not ready to support patients' self-management even though they will soon be in practic
101 , the importance of team-based care, patient self-management, exercise, structured psychotherapy, pha
102 ledge and perceptions about medications; (d) Self-management-facilitated by education, knowledge and
103 rom the patients' experiences in relation to self-management following acute coronary syndrome provid
104 ty about the factors that support successful self-management following stroke.
105 iction of caffeinated or acidic beverages as self-management for lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS)
106 clinical and cost effectiveness of nurse-led self-management for patients with chronic obstructive pu
107 Clinicians should consider these elements of self-management for their effect on asthma care and as a
108 he factors which facilitate or hinder stroke self-management from the patients' perspective.
109 e decreased by 17.6 mm Hg (14.9-20.3) in the self-management group and by 12.2 mm Hg (9.5-14.9) in th
110  10.4-15.5) from baseline to 6 months in the self-management group and by 9.2 mm Hg (6.7-11.8) in the
111 wever, when adjusted for baseline scores the self-management group had a statistically significant hi
112                   Patients randomized to the self-management group received tip sheets in groups and
113 nt Scales-2 pain score in the osteoarthritis self-management group was 0.4 point lower (95% CI, -0.8
114 nalog scale pain score in the osteoarthritis self-management group was 1.1 points lower (CI, -1.6 to
115     The rate of the primary end point in the self-management group was no different from that in the
116                                 Hypertension self-management has been shown to improve systolic blood
117                                              Self-management has potential importance for reducing bo
118                 This can be debilitating for self-management in adolescence.
119 le (VSMS) was guided by previous research on self-management in other chronically ill populations, a
120 studies of therapeutic patient education for self-management in selected cardiovascular conditions.
121 nd harms of eHealth interventions to support self-management in solid organ transplant recipients.
122 thesize current research findings related to self-management, in order to better understand the proce
123 hemes identified from the data affect stroke self-management: Individual capacity; support for self-m
124 action plan forms as a vehicle for providing self-management instructions did not have a significant
125 can help design a culturally appropriate T2D self-management intervention in Latinos.
126                  AIMS is a nurse-led, 1-on-1 self-management intervention incorporating feedback from
127                           The osteoarthritis self-management intervention involved educational materi
128 ancer E-Health (BREATH) trial is a Web-based self-management intervention to support the psychologica
129 e original research on: (1) effectiveness of self-management interventions among individuals followin
130       Further research is needed to evaluate self-management interventions among people following acu
131             Evidence of the effectiveness of self-management interventions among people with acute co
132                                              Self-management interventions are frequently implemented
133                                              Self-management interventions are increasingly implement
134 ated in future development and evaluation of self-management interventions as a way of ensuring clari
135  of exercise and the educational approach of self-management interventions could be additive.
136                                     Overall, self-management interventions did not reduce seizure rat
137 monstrated variation in the effectiveness of self-management interventions in main outcomes assessed
138                                 Exercise and self-management interventions reduce pain and improve fu
139                                              Self-management interventions tended to be complex and i
140 al support were identified as key aspects of self-management interventions that patients found improv
141 cal practice and the design of comprehensive self-management interventions to improve outcomes for ca
142                                              Self-management interventions to reduce healthcare use a
143 mized controlled studies comparing nurse-led self-management interventions to usual care Seven electr
144                          To explore diabetes self-management interventions undertaken or promoted by
145                                              Self-management interventions were heterogeneous, with a
146                                Education and self-management interventions were the most cost-effecti
147 ich can be used to inform the development of self-management interventions.
148 ns by policy makers on the implementation of self-management interventions.
149 common in people living with dementia; their self-management is an important determinant of wellbeing
150 res patients' perceptions of the benefits of self-management is limited.
151                                     Although self-management is recommended for persons with epilepsy
152 tant to understand if older Black Americans' self-management is supported by current recommendations
153 asizes behavior change through collaborative self-management, it may aid in the translation of increa
154 e of competing pressures in academia, making self-management key to building a successful career.
155                                              Self-management may be a lifelong task for patients with
156                          Lack of support for self-management may contribute to adverse health outcome
157 of comorbid conditions, and enhanced patient self-management may help to prevent hospitalizations in
158  (mean beta = 1.74, SD = 0.58; P = .003) and self-management (mean beta = 2.42, SD = 0.90; P = .008)
159 her literacy is related to subsequent asthma self-management, measured as adherence to inhaled steroi
160 ruct an understanding of the process of pain self-management motivation.
161   527 participants were randomly assigned to self-management (n=263) or control (n=264), of whom 480
162 n=263) or control (n=264), of whom 480 (91%; self-management, n=234; control, n=246) were included in
163 tudents' performance in supporting patients' self-management, nor on factors associated with this per
164 contextual red flags," such as deteriorating self-management of a chronic condition, that could refle
165 apeutic advantages, linked to their use, are self-management of ascites and palliative care at home.
166                          Corrie targets: (1) self-management of cardiac medications, (2) self-trackin
167 r there is a reciprocal relationship between self-management of chronic back pain and health-related
168 s and their family caregivers with long-term self-management of COPD.
169 upation, contacts, and clusters; measures on self-management of health and quarantine; general hygien
170                                              Self-management of hypertension in combination with tele
171      Appropriate footwear is recommended for self-management of knee osteoarthritis.
172                                              Self-management of moderate-to-severe asthma depends on
173 essed priority setting or decision-making in self-management of multimorbidity among adults.
174 d priority setting and/or decision-making in self-management of multimorbidity.
175                   Uptake of self-testing and self-management of oral anticoagulation [corrected] has
176 Our analysis showed that self-monitoring and self-management of oral coagulation is a safe option for
177 d support from health professionals in their self-management of rehabilitation and recovery, particul
178 m healthcare staff about appropriate patient self-management of sting reactions, to propose indicatio
179  delivery of medications, improved patients' self-management of their asthma, and recognition of risk
180 y have enabled more effective and convenient self-management of type 1 diabetes.
181 the proportion of apps available in 2018 for self-management of type 2 diabetes that included goal-se
182 otiated, carers take over responsibility for self-management, often due to safety concerns.
183 maximize the benefits of osteoarthritis pain self-management, older Black Americans must be equipped
184 tive and quantitative studies describing the self-management (or self-management assisted by family c
185 ith a framework approach using categories of self-management outcomes reported in a previous review a
186 t needs, used multiple components to improve self-management outcomes, and often used multidisciplina
187 on approaches used and the impact on patient self-management outcomes.
188 er-teen discussion and enabled comparison of self-management patterns across teens in our study.
189  study aimed to pilot the Perioperative Pain Self-management (PePS) intervention, based on principles
190 of activation (Patient Activation Scale) and self-management (Perceived Efficacy in Patient-Physician
191  PEFR<80 [0.76 (0.666; 0.854)], non-use of a self-management plan (SMP) [0.554 (0.515; 0.593)], poor
192  response and side effects; and education in self-management plan including training updates for self
193  patient personal characteristics (including self-management plan use, inhaler technique, medication
194 epinephrine autoinjector with an anaphylaxis self-management plan.
195 pears to be beneficial as an augmentation to self-management practice for patients with chronic back
196 x, blood pressure, and responses to diabetes self-management practices and attitudes surveys.
197  of financial resources) impact individuals' self-management priority setting and decision-making abi
198 py (step 1) followed by 6 sessions of a pain self-management program over 12 weeks (step 2), and a co
199             A telephone-based osteoarthritis self-management program produced moderate improvements i
200 ed antidepressant therapy followed by a pain self-management program resulted in substantial improvem
201 revious studies of the small-group Arthritis Self-Management Program.
202                 We developed a web-based CBT self-management programme (Regul8) in partnership with p
203                              Elements of the self-management programme are already being used in watc
204 patients who undertook a brief heart failure self-management programme facilitated by a specialist he
205 y the randomized controlled trial (RCT) of a self-management programme for BPH.
206 ped nurse facilitated, cognitive behavioural self-management programme was developed and was delivere
207  to improve access to and uptake of diabetes self-management programmes are needed globally.
208          Research suggests that chronic pain self-management programmes have beneficial effects on pa
209 systems and users when implementing diabetes self-management programmes in different areas.
210                               Some nurse-led self-management programmes in this systematic review pro
211       The review demonstrated that nurse-led self-management programmes may be associated with reduct
212                 Group exercise components of self-management programmes were also favourably evaluate
213            Whether behavioral approaches for self-management programs benefit individuals with type 1
214 uggest that psychosocial interventions (i.e. self-management programs, exercise) can decrease osteoar
215 g, patient's self-testing [PST] or patient's self-management [PSM] and left atrial appendage closure)
216                                          The self-management RCT has revealed that a rigorously struc
217                                              Self-management refers to the strategies, decisions and
218 Supervised exercise program and advice about self-management (rehabilitation) (individually tailored,
219                                     Overall, self-management research in epilepsy is limited by the r
220 uld work collaboratively to expand access to self-management resources, particularly when personal an
221 nceptualization of their asthma symptoms and self-management responses differed from situation to sit
222 ular those involving sequences of events and self-management responses.
223 in a visible sequence of asthma symptoms and self-management responses.
224 their own unique sets of asthma symptoms and self-management responses.
225 re with self-titration of antihypertensives (self-management) results in lower blood pressure in pati
226                Development of the Vasculitis Self-Management Scale (VSMS) was guided by previous rese
227 or guideline implementation but also patient self-management skill enhancement and facilitated treatm
228 sponsive to medication) are related to other self-management skills and health literacy.
229  interventions designed to promote patients' self-management skills and improve patient-physician com
230 wledge related to the development of patient self-management skills and provides direction for more r
231 eceived tip sheets in groups and were taught self-management skills to implement the advice.
232 tionale for including measures of adherence, self-management skills, and exposures to stress in asthm
233        Appropriate measurement of adherence, self-management skills, and exposures to stress will enh
234       Patient adherence, the level of asthma self-management skills, exposure to stress, and depressi
235 plinary professionals engaged patients in HF self-management skills.
236 require patients to have considerable HL and self-management skills.
237 orks, new public sources of information, and self-management software.
238 in functional activity and the use of taught self-management strategies are central to occupational t
239                       Effective and feasible self-management strategies are needed to reduce sedentar
240 cess to quality care, patient activation and self-management strategies have been suggested as a prom
241               There is limited evidence that self-management strategies modestly improve some patient
242 fied many sources of social support and used self-management strategies to cope with the situation.
243 rocess of education, movement retraining and self-management strategies within a positive and non-jud
244 edge, coping, self-care, social support, and self-management strategies.
245 ciplinary team is a key step in implementing self-management strategies.
246 ost-effectiveness of the Adherence Improving self-Management Strategy (AIMS) compared with treatment
247  of the proven-effective Adherence Improving Self-Management Strategy (AIMS), from a societal perspec
248 ating physical limitations); (3) negotiating self-management support (carer availability and knowledg
249 r confidence and their actual performance in self-management support (p<0.001).
250 on of tools which capture two key aspects of self-management support - education (guidebooks for pati
251 management support: self-efficacy to perform self-management support and socio-structural factors (So
252 ed 3-6 months after undergoing training in a self-management support approach.
253              The study has demonstrated what self-management support at end of life entails and how i
254 rer and professional views on the concept of self-management support at end of life, specifically in
255 therefore took a network approach to explore self-management support conceptualising it as types of i
256 erall low level of performance in delivering self-management support during internship.
257                      This paper explores why self-management support failed to become part of normal
258                                              Self-management support forms a central aspect of chroni
259 ention group (n = 196) received 12 months of self-management support from nonphysician care coordinat
260                               The concept of self-management support had salience for patients, carer
261                  Evidence for the success of self-management support has mainly focussed on individua
262 spirations for provision and the delivery of self-management support in primary care.
263               Topics included the meaning of self-management support in this context, roles and behav
264  order to describe, characterise and explain self-management support in this context.
265                                          The self-management support needs of patients following stro
266                          Additional glaucoma self-management support resources should be directed tow
267 ogram that combined transition and long-term self-management support resulted in significantly greate
268                                              Self-management support was not formulated as a practice
269                               The concept of self-management support whilst well characterised in the
270 ing Chronic Illness Care initiative (patient self-management support, clinical information systems, d
271 lated factors, i.e. self-efficacy to perform self-management support, general feeling of competency o
272 rther attuned to the complex competencies of self-management support.
273 hich may be reduced by care coordination and self-management support.
274 s and practitioners required by the ethos of self-management support.
275 he most likely professional group to provide self-management support.
276 tion is needed to broaden the perspective on self-management support.
277 o select hypothesized associated factors for self-management support: self-efficacy to perform self-m
278 services, data and information flow, patient self-management, surveillance, and disease management fr
279 ly observed therapy (WOT) is a novel patient self-management system consisting of an edible ingestion
280 ; and attitudes towards supporting patients' self-management (Theory of Planned Behaviour).
281                                   Supporting self-management through the encouragement of lifestyle c
282           Type 1 diabetes requires intensive self-management to avoid acute and long-term health comp
283 specially those that address weight loss and self-management, to reduce the impact of having knee OA.
284 are setting and the potential of Corrie as a self-management tool for acute myocardial infarction rec
285                           A mailed Arthritis Self-Management Tool Kit proved effective in improving h
286  clinical care to improve patient education, self-management training and urate-lowering medication t
287 (nonphysician health workers) and optimizing self-management (treatment supporters).
288 analysis of an 18-month, 4-arm, hypertension self-management trial of 591 veterans with hypertension
289 18 months after completion of a hypertension self-management trial.
290 t pathway, but via an indirect pathway where self-management was a mediator (-19.09, p<0.01).
291                                         High self-management was associated with retention after tran
292                                 Specifically self-management was identified as an ever-changing proce
293                                              Self-management was viewed as an important, unavoidable
294                                    The term 'self-management' was unfamiliar to participants.
295 ive study about teens' experiences of asthma self-management, we found that variations in terminology
296      Processes and factors of multimorbidity self-management were identified and sorted into categori
297 quality of life of patients with BPH through self-management will help patients and may reduce the fi
298 c barriers often limit patient adherence and self-management with hemodialysis.
299 ntegration of the conceptual developments in self-management with new approaches to the design of cli
300 t-effective in promotion and facilitation of self-management, with improvements in patients' knowledg

 
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