Patient Education and Self-Care

Lowell S. Levin


DOI: 10.2190/BQLK-B0VB-E98Y-WM2G

Abstract

This author clarifies the philosophical, strategic, and operational differences between patient education as traditionally practiced and self-care education as a relatively new initiative. The essential and most fundamental distinction has to do with lows of control in health care. Patient education generally accepts the role of the patient, as a recipient of services where compliance to appropriate, professionally defined health care regimens is a valued outcome. Self-care education, in contrast, attempts to build an individual s capacity to self-diagnose, self-tract, and in general self-sustain their health. Patient education views people as health consumers; self-care views people as "prosumers," both consumers and self-providers. Self-care education places the individual primarily on the supply side of the health care equation with important consequences for the professional care system, the individual, and the community.

Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.