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  • Self-managing versus self-management: reinvigorating the socio-political dimensions of self-management

    Author
    Kendall, Elizabeth
    Ehrlich, Carolyn
    Sunderland, Naomi
    Zeeman, Heidi
    Rushton, Carole
    Year published
    2011
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    In Australia, self-management predominantly refers to education programmes that, theoretically, equip people with chronic disease with the necessary information and skills to manage their own healthcare, maintain optimal health, and minimize the consequences of their condition. These programmes are designed, and often delivered, by practitioners. Our research has demonstrated that for consumers, self-management involves navigating and responding to a myriad of information sources and experiences, many of which originate in their own lived bodily experiences and personal knowledge. In contrast to this organic and dynamic version of self-managing that is naturally practised by consumers, common practitioner and policy representations of self-management tend to discount consumer agency and overlook the daily ways in which people manage their own body, experiences and health choices.We argue that if the self-management movement is to tackle health inequalities (rather than creating new ones), health professionals and policy-makers must examine the potentially damaging assumptions that are inherent in contemporary self-management discourse.
    Journal Title
    Chronic Illness
    Volume
    7
    Issue
    1
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1177/1742395310380281
    Subject
    Health and Community Services
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/40088
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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