• Med. J. Aust. · Nov 2008

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    The United Kingdom Expert Patients Programme: results and implications from a national evaluation.

    • Anne Rogers, Anne Kennedy, Peter Bower, Caroline Gardner, Claire Gately, Victoria Lee, David Reeves, and Gerry Richardson.
    • National Primary Care Research and Development Centre, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK. anne.rogers@manchester.ac.uk
    • Med. J. Aust. 2008 Nov 17; 189 (S10): S21-4.

    AbstractThe Expert Patients Programme (EPP) is a central element of chronic disease management policy in the United Kingdom. It aims to deliver self-care support by developing peoples' self-care skills, confidence and motivation to take more effective control over their long-term conditions. A large, national randomised controlled trial found that the EPP's lay-led skills training was effective in improving self-efficacy and energy levels among patients with long-term conditions, and was likely to be cost-effective. Key questions remain as to whether existing outcome measures capture the core outcomes that are important to patients with long-term conditions. The development and evaluation of self-care support initiatives should take into account the extent to which self-care support initiatives can be integrated into peoples' everyday lives, and the degree of fit with patients' existing adaptations and strategies. Rather than being concentrated on a single course, central resources for self-management support should be directed at a variety of systems and interventions that are able to meet the wide range of needs of patients with chronic conditions.

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