Abstract
It has been established that people with mental illness experience mortality and morbidity from all the major health conditions at 2–3 times the rate of those without mental illness. One way to overcome this problem is to encourage consumers of mental health services to self-manage their physical health. The purpose of the study was to investigate the facilitators and barriers to physical health self-management by people living with a mental illness. The study was underpinned by a hermeneutic phenomenological framework and utilised focus groups for data collection. A total of 27 participants, who lived in the community, had a diagnosed mental illness and who also had a co-morbid chronic physical health condition were included in one of three focus groups. The collected data were thematically analysed to identify common experiences and difficulties. It was found that participants were well aware of the need to attend to physical health issues. However, a number of factors at the individual, social and system levels impeded their ability to do so. Barriers to self-management included the debilitating nature of mental illness, poor physical health literacy, stigma from medical staff and social isolation, which resulted in a lack of support. Whereas informal peer networks, group participation and where it was offered, the support and encouragement from healthcare professionals facilitated health self-management.
Notes
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