定性研究
心理学
医学
健康素养
自我管理
医疗保健
护理部
社会科学
计算机科学
经济增长
机器学习
社会学
经济
作者
Huang NingZhen,Sha Yang,Zonghua Wang,Huilan Zhang,Tingting Li,Yanling Jiang,Jianping You,Jianmei Liao
摘要
ABSTRACT Aim To systematically investigate the barriers and facilitators of symptom self‐management behaviour in patients with decompensated cirrhosis. Design This study adopted a qualitative descriptive design, which was reported in accordance with the Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Research guidelines. Methods One‐on‐one, face‐to‐face, semi‐structured interviews were conducted with 33 stakeholders, including nine patients, nine family caregivers and 15 healthcare professionals. Interview transcripts were analysed using the Capability, Opportunity, Motivation‐Behaviour (COM‐B) model, integrating dyadic interview analysis and qualitative content analysis. Results We identified 11 barriers to symptom self‐management relating to capability (poor illness perception, limited health literacy, difficulties in information acquisition and physical dysfunction); opportunity (cultural conflicts, heavy economic burden and inadequate resource support) and motivation (diminished sense of meaning in life, insufficient internal drive, delayed perception of therapeutic benefit and low self‐efficacy). Conversely, we also identified eight facilitators relating to capability (progressive cognitive restructuring and adequate health literacy); opportunity (supportive environments, family cohesion and diversified information channels); and motivation (proactive adaptation, high intrinsic motivation and sustained reinforcement of therapeutic benefit). Conclusions This study identified key barriers and facilitators to symptom self‐management in patients with decompensated cirrhosis, providing an evidence base for developing intervention strategies in the future. Patient and Public Contribution Patients, family caregivers and healthcare professionals contributed to the study through interviews during the research process and member checks during analysis. Trial Registration This clinical trial (registration number: ChiCTR2500097867) is registered in the Chinese Clinical Trial Registry as “Core symptoms and self‐management among decompensated cirrhosis patients: a cross‐sectional study”. The trial registration link is https://www.chictr.org.cn/showproj.html?proj=252931
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