- Self care
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Self care Intervention MeSH D012648 Self care is personal health maintenance. It is any activity of an individual, family or community, with the intention of improving or restoring health, or treating or preventing disease.
Self care includes all health decisions people (as individuals or consumers) make for themselves and their families to get and stay physically and mentally fit. Self care is exercising to maintain physical fitness and good mental health. It is also eating well, self-medicating, practicing good hygiene and avoiding health hazards such as smoking and drinking to prevent ill health. Self care is also taking care of minor ailments, long term conditions, or one’s own health after discharge from secondary and tertiary health care.
Individuals do self care, and experts and professionals support self care to enable individuals to do enhanced self care.
Self care support has crucial enabling value and considerable scope in developing countries with an already overburdened health care system. But it also has an essential role to play in affluent countries where people are becoming more conscious about their health and want to have a greater role in taking care of themselves.
To enable people to do enhanced self care, they can be supported in various ways and by different service providers.
Contents
Self care support
Self care support can include:
- Self care information on health and human body systems, lifestyle, physical activity, or healthy eating
- Support for the capture, management, interpretation, and reporting of Observations of Daily Living (ODLs)[1], the tracking of trends, and the use of the resulting information as clues for self care action and decision making.
- Information prescriptions[2] providing personalised information and instructions to enable an individual to self care and take control of their health
- Self care and self monitoring devices and assistive technology[3]
- Self care skills and life skills training programmes and courses for people
- Aid from spiritual care givers
- Advice from occupational therapists, pharmacists, physiotherapists and complementary therapists
- Self care support networks which can be face to face or virtual, and made up of peers or people who want to provide support to others or receive support and information from others.Including a self care Primer for provider/consumer convergence
Self care approaches
Self care topics include:
- General fitness training
- Health
- Hygiene
- Life extension
- Life skills
- Nootropics
- Nutrition
- Physical exercise
- Sleep
- Stress management
- Vitamins
References
- ^ Health in Everyday Living Robert Wood Johnson Foundation primer
- ^ Website of an Information Prescripton Project in the UK
- ^ Website of the Foundation for Assistive Technology
External links
- Self Care in England
- Self Care in the UK
- Expert Patients Programme in England
- Self Care in Australia
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