articleThe Journal of Cardiovascular NursingMar 14, 2015Closed access

The Situation-Specific Theory of Heart Failure Self-Care

Feminist Archive North · University of Pennsylvania · +3 more institutions

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Abstract

Background

Since the situation-specific theory of heart failure (HF) self-care was published in 2008, we have learned much about how and why patients with HF take care of themselves. This knowledge was used to revise and update the theory.

Objective

The purpose of this article was to describe the revised, updated situation-specific theory of HF self-care. RESULT: Three major revisions were made to the existing theory: (1) a new theoretical concept reflecting the process of symptom perception was added; (2) each self-care process now involves both autonomous and consultative elements; and (3) a closer link between the self-care processes and the naturalistic decision-making process is described. In the revised theory, HF self-care is defined as a naturalistic decision-making process with person, problem, and environmental factors that influence the everyday decisions made by patients and the self-care actions taken. The first self-care process, maintenance, captures those behaviors typically referred to as treatment adherence. The second self-care process, symptom perception, involves body listening, monitoring signs, as well as recognition, interpretation, and labeling of symptoms. The third self-care process, management, is the response to symptoms when they occur. A total of 5 assumptions and 8 testable propositions are specified in this revised theory.

Citation impact

736
total citations
FWCI
35.27
Percentile
100%
References
131
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Process (computing)
  • Perception
  • Self care
  • Active listening
  • Medicine
  • Interpretation (philosophy)
  • Psychology
  • Nursing
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Peace, Justice and strong institutions
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