Self-Management in Older Pakistanis Living With Multimorbidity in East London

Author:

Sultan Najia1ORCID,Swinglehurst Deborah1

Affiliation:

1. Queen Mary University of London, London, United Kingdom

Abstract

In this article, we explore how older British Pakistani people experience multimorbidity (defined as the coexistence of two or more medical conditions) and engage with self-management within the context of their life histories and relationships. We conducted biographical narrative interviews in Urdu and/or English with 15 first-generation Pakistani migrants living with multimorbidity, at their homes in East London. Our analysis showed that the triadic construct of family, faith, and health was central to how participants made sense of their lives, constituting notions of “managing” in the context of multimorbidity. For Pakistani patients, the lived experience of health was inseparable from a situated context of family and faith. Our findings have implications for existing public health strategies of self-management, underpinned by neoliberal discourses that focus on individual responsibility and agency. Health care provision needs to better integrate the importance of relationships between family, faith, and health when developing services for these patients.

Funder

Research Trainees Coordinating Centre

barts charity

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference13 articles.

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