Profile of social self-management practices in daily life with Parkinson's disease is associated with symptom severity and health quality of life.
Linda Tickle-DegnenMichael T StevensonSarah D GunneryMarie Saint-HilaireCathi A ThomasLinda Sprague MartinezBarbara HabermannElena N NaumovaPublished in: Disability and rehabilitation (2020)
Findings provide insight into similarity and variation in how people with Parkinson's disease engage with social self-management resources and point to person-centered interventions.Implications for RehabilitationSocial self-management is a biopsychosocial construct to identify and describe self-care practices that engage one's social resources for managing healthful daily living.People with Parkinson's disease vary in their profiles of engaging in social self-management practices in daily living, and this variability relates to severity of symptoms and health quality of life.Learning how to identify health-centered social self-management practices may help people with Parkinson's disease to focus on the healthfulness of their own practices.Learning how to strategically engage one's social resources as part of self-care may help people with Parkinson's disease to master managing their health and well-being in daily life.