1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910814949803321

Autore

Redman Barbara Klug

Titolo

Advanced practice nursing ethics in chronic disease self-management [[electronic resource] /] / Barbara Klug Redman

Pubbl/distr/stampa

New York, : Springer, 2012

ISBN

1-78539-302-2

0-8261-9573-3

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource

Disciplina

613

Soggetti

Patient education

Self-care, Health

Chronic diseases - Treatment

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Cover Page; Advanced Practice Nursing Ethics in Chronic Disease Self-Management; Contents; Abbreviations; Preface; Chapter 1: A Suggested Ethical Framework for Patient Self-Management of Chronic Disease; The Capability Approach; Goals for PSM of Chronic Disease; Concerns for Equity and Protection of Patient Safety; An Ethically Appropriate Model for PSM of Chronic Disease; Reflections on Capability Framework for PSM of Chronic Disease; Summary; Study Questions and Answers; Chapter 2: State of the Science and Best Self-Management Practices by Disease; Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Diseases

Asthma and Chronic Respiratory DiseasesCancer; Cardiovascular Diseases; Diabetes; Summary; Study Questions and Answers; Chapter 3: Best Practices in Patient Self-Management Preparation and Support; Chronic Care Model; Structured Programs Including Peer Models; Provider-Patient Interaction; Family and Community Support; An Alternative Nursing Model; Summary; Study Questions and Answers; Chapter 4: Changing the Patient's Self; Education as Initiation into Socially Constructed Norms; Beliefs; Motivation; Identity and How to Balance Cultural and Medical Validity; Importance of Dignity

Moral Conflicts of Patients and FamiliesSummary; Study Questions and Answers; Chapter 5: Morally Valid Measurement Model for Patient Self-Management Decisions; The Decisions: Patient Selection, Safety, Shared



decision Making, and Goals Met; Monitoring for Harms as Well as for Benefits in PSM Measurement; Mandatory Range of Instruments Psychometrically Validated for SM; Summary; Study Questions and Answers; Chapter 6: Technologies in Patient Self-Management; Information Health Technologies and PSM Support Systems; Home, Mobile, and Personal Technologies; Ethics in Technology Assessment

Social NetworkingPSM as Social Innovation with Embedded Technologies; Summary; Study Questions and Answers; Chapter 7: Paradigmatic Examples of Patient Self-Management Ethics; Shifting Boundaries from Provider Management to PSM (And Back); Contribution of PSM to Decrease of Health Disparities and Poverty; Persons with Debilitating Symptoms but without Medical Diagnosis and/or Treatment Plan; Patients with Comorbidities; Mental Health Recovery Movement; Common Chronic Conditions for Which No Stable PSM Model Exists; Summary; Study Questions and Answers

Chapter 8: Implementing an Ethically Appropriate Model for Patient Self-ManagementUniversal Access to Safe and Effective PSM Education and Support; Guaranteed Threshold of Capabilities Development; Tools for PSM and Decision Support; Necessary Health System Changes; PSM of Chronic Disease in Low-And Middle-Income Countries; What Does All This Have to Do With Bioethics?; Summary; Key Ethical Questions and Answers; Appendix A: Measurement Instruments; Measuring Pain Self-Efficacy (Miles et al., 2011); Partners in Health Scale (PIH); Instrument Description, Administration and Scoring Guidelines

Psychometric Properties

Sommario/riassunto

The trend toward patient self-management (PSM) of chronic disease is accelerating at a rapid pace along with the evolution of home-based or mobile technologies to support this care. Yet the development of self-management practice standards and advanced practice nursing support has been haphazard. This book fills a glaring void by addressing, against a backdrop of current best practices in PSM, such questions as: What are appropriate standards of safety in PSM? How can we be assured those standards are met? How does one reach a good prognosis about whether or not patients will be able to practi