Defining Self-Management for Solid Organ Transplantation Recipients: A Mixed Method Study

Author:

Brunner Katie1ORCID,Weisschuh Lydia1,Jobst Stefan1ORCID,Kugler Christiane1ORCID,Rebafka Anne1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Nursing Science, University Medical Centre, Albert-Ludwigs University Freiburg, Breisacher Straße 153, 79110 Freiburg, Germany

Abstract

Patients with Solid Organ Transplantations (SOTx) face long-term lifestyle adaptations, psychological and social adjustments, and complex self-care regimes to maintain health post-transplant. Self-management (SM) skills represent important aspects of nursing communication with SOTx patients; however, there is potential for SM to be defined narrowly in terms of medication adherence. The study presented here collated the existing definitions in a mixed method review in order to identify SM attributes for this group (including those unique to this population). Secondary analysis of a dataset and bibliographic analysis and an expert panel were used to develop a comprehensive working definition of SOTx patients. The analysis comprised critical interpretation of the evolving definition content, concepts, and contexts of application in current usages and over time. We identified eight definitions and 63 cited definition sources from bibliographic analysis. Findings identified limitations of the existing definitions. Population-specific attributes included optimisation of transplant outcomes, active engagement in healthy behaviours, control, structure, and discipline characteristics, and moderating factors of patient motivation, self-efficacy, and cognitive function. A critical appraisal of definitions indicated inadequately defined aspects such as setting, temporal dimension, concept interaction, interventions, and measurable outcomes. The bibliographic analysis highlighted the influence of broader chronic illness constructions of SM, underpinning the generalisable SM attributes in current definitions. Further research may advance the development of a definition in exploring the relevance of SOTx-specific attributes of the definition.

Funder

German Government Ministry for Education and Research- Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Open Access Publication Fund of the University of Freiburg

Publisher

MDPI AG

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