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- Cynthia W Kelly.
- Department of Nursing, Xavier University, Cincinnati, OH, USA. kellyc3@xavier.edu
- J Clin Nurs. 2008 Apr 1; 17 (7B): 188-91.
AimsTo present a new nursing intervention category called therapeutic enhancement.BackgroundFewer than half of North Americans follow their physician's recommendations for diet and exercise, even when such are crucial to their health or recovery. It is imperative that nurses consider new ways to promote healthy behaviours. Therapeutic enhancement is intended to provide such a fresh approach. Traditional intervention techniques focusing on education, contracts, social support and more frequent interaction with physicians appear not to be effective when used alone. Successful strategies have been multidisciplinary; and have included interventions by professional nurses who assist patients to understand their disease and the disease process and that helps them to develop disease-management and self-management skills. Therapeutic enhancement incorporates The Stages of Change Theory, Commitment to Health Theory, Motivational Interviewing techniques and instrumentation specifically designed for process evaluation of health-promoting interventions.MethodThis is a critical review of approaches that, heretofore, have not been synthesised in a single published article.ConclusionsBased on the commonly used Stages of Change model, therapeutic enhancement is useful for patients who are at the action stage of change. Using therapeutic enhancement as well as therapeutic strategies identified in Stages of Change Theory, such as contingency management, helping relationships, counterconditioning, stimulus control and Motivational Interviewing techniques, nursing professionals can significantly increase the chances of patients moving from action to the maintenance stage of change for a specific health behaviour.Relevance To Clinical PracticeUsing the nursing intervention category, therapeutic enhancement can increase caregivers' success in helping patients maintain healthy behaviours.
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