 Provide
information in a manner appropriate for the person
General practices are increasingly
adapting to people’s needs and commitments by
offering alternative modes of communication such as
email, the Internet and text messaging. Email could
provide a convenient way for patients to reschedule
appointments or request repeat prescriptions, and
has been suggested as a low-cost alternative to
postal or phone reminders.15,16
The Internet is a major source of
information, yet most health professionals have
given little consideration to how patients access
information and the strengths of those information
sources to patients. In many cases, the Internet may
provide better information than a doctor or health
educator.
Mobile phone text messaging has been
reported to be an effective and welcome mode of
reminding teenagers to take their asthma medication
and providing tips on inhaler use and asthma
self-care.8
Because people often can’t retain
all the information if it is given at once,
education may need to be tailored over several
consultations, particularly where behaviour change
is the goal.3 Chronic disease
self-management programs are increasingly being
adopted as a structured approach to meeting people’s
information needs.
Tailor management through shared decision-making
Key features of effective doctor–patient interaction to manage long-term
conditions are shared goal setting, written management plans and regular
follow-up.3
Health professionals can help ensure their recommendations are suited to the
patients’ needs by asking them how confident they are about managing their
condition, their expectations for management, what they understand about the
condition, and what factors that will affect their ability and willingness
to carry out aspects of self-management such as readiness to monitor glucose
in diabetes, barriers to losing weight or increasing physical activity, or
problems adhering to preventer asthma medication.
Routine attention to the following aspects of the person’s situation has
been suggested as a way of ensuring that the visit results in shared
decision-making and individualised management plans:3
-
Explore people’s social supports
and physical environment, which may influence
their health (e.g. smokers in the person’s
household, access to healthy food choices and
physical activity, family attitudes to the
behaviour changes needed to stay well).
-
Negotiate an agreed individualised
written disease management plan, including specific
strategies for dealing with acute symptomatic
episodes.
-
Find common ground for planning
ongoing management so that you and the patient can
agree on what should be done.
-
Find out whether and to what extent the
person wants to participate in decision-making. This
might depend on age, cultural background and education.
Patients with moderate-to-severe
asthma benefit from a combination of self-management
education, GP review and an individualised written
asthma action plan.7,17 Participation in
self-management education programs that include
preparation of a written asthma action plan helps
people understand their condition and take
responsibility for day-to- day monitoring and
medication adjustment, and has been shown to reduce
hospitalisation rates, emergency department visits,
other unplanned urgent asthma care, days missed from
work or school, night-time symptoms and effects on
quality of life.17 There is also strong evidence for
benefits of self-management approaches in diabetes
and hypertension, and some evidence for arthritis
and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.18 (See
Offer referral to self-management programs.)
Case study: acknowledge
the person’s perspective
Case 3. A 55-year-old woman with
longstanding adult attention-deficit
hyperactivity disorder, obesity and
recently diagnosed type 2 diabetes
attends her local public hospital
diabetes clinic, where she is advised to
join a group session on healthy eating
run by a hospital dietitian. Despite
this, she feels dissatisfied and
helpless to manage her weight, so her GP
refers her to a dietitian in private
practice for dietary management of
diabetes and obesity.
At the first session, she discloses
that she had only recently learned that
her medication causes weight gain and
would have contributed significantly to
her diabetes. She explains that this had
made her feel very frustrated during the
group education session at the
outpatient clinic, where general
statements were made about diabetes and
weight gain and she felt that she was
being blamed. She tells the dietitian
that she felt so “left out and guilty”
that she had not taken in any of the
information on dietary choices. In
contrast to the group session, the
one-to-one private consultation allows
her to explain her own circumstances and
she feels satisfied that someone
understands her difficulties and that
she is receiving tailored advice. |

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