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Control in chronic condition self‐care management: how it occurs in the health worker–client relationship and implications for client empowerment
Author(s) -
Lawn Sharon,
Delany Toni,
Sweet Linda,
Battersby Malcolm,
C. Skinner Timothy
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of advanced nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.948
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1365-2648
pISSN - 0309-2402
DOI - 10.1111/jan.12203
Subject(s) - empowerment , nursing , health care , general partnership , control (management) , psychology , information sharing , dependency (uml) , business , medicine , management , systems engineering , finance , engineering , political science , law , economics , economic growth
Aim To examine health worker–client interactions during care planning to understand processes that foster client empowerment and disempowerment. Background It is unclear how health worker–client exchanges and information sharing through chronic condition care planning currently operate in primary health care. Moreover, it is unclear how control in these exchanges either enhances collaborative decision‐making, partnership and client empowerment, or works to create client disempowerment and dependency on workers and health services. Design Critical discourse analysis of qualitative data from ethnographic observations and audio‐taped worker–client consultations. Method Multidisciplinary teams in two Australian community‐based primary healthcare sites participated. This included nurses, general practitioners and allied health workers and their clients who had a chronic condition care plan. Nineteen worker–client consultations were observed/recorded in 2011. Results Control was expressed through multiple processes inherent in the worker role and in their interactions with clients. When workers exercised disproportionate control and clients relinquished their own control, client disempowerment and dependency were evident. Clients' attempts to gain control and workers' attempts to relinquish control alleviated clients' disempowerment and dependency. However, structural features of information sharing systems and workers' care planning behaviours diminished such efforts. Conclusion Worker awareness of their communication style and the power of their role must improve for client chronic condition self‐care management to be achieved. Training on the impacts of control in worker communication and systems where they work must be provided if unbeneficial forms of client dependency are to be overcome and true self‐care management is to be realized.

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