Top Tip - My Condition, My Terms, My Life
Transcription
Top Tip - My Condition, My Terms, My Life
Top Tip: Give people information that they can understand – this is the first step to empowerment. It can be challenging, particularly for people who can’t read or write. Top Tip: Take the time to understand what’s going on in the lives of people living with long term conditions. Top Tip: Support people to monitor their own condition(s) e.g. taking their own blood pressure or blood sugar readings, so that they come to consultations and checkups with some of the information they want to discuss. Top Tip: Recognise that you, as a professional, are having to learn to do things differently too. Top Tip: Trust the person you’re supporting. Professionals need to recognise that self management is about shifting the balance of power in favour of the person living with long term conditions. This takes a lot of trust in each other. Top Tip: Remember that not everyone is able to read or write, speak or easily understand what services are being offered to them or how they can help them. Top Tip: Effective communication between service providers and users is essential. Top Tip: Stop labelling people and calling them ‘patients’ – they’re people. Think of them as people, not as a condition. Top Tip: Communicate and listen well. Really listening and hearing what people have to say is key to supporting self management. Using skills such as motivational interviewing, open questions and reflecting back what people say helps get much more information from someone about how well they are self managing, or whether they have unmet needs. Top Tip: Put yourself in the position of people living with long term conditions. Top Tip: Don’t forget about self management for mental health conditions. Self management can be very useful, for instance involving people at an earlier stage in the management of their dementia, straight after diagnosis. Planning ahead and starting to have some of those difficult conversations will make things easier for themselves and their family at a later stage.