Litcius/Paper detail

Patient Engagement in Health Coaching and Self-Management Abilities in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

M.V. Benzo, Sydney S. Kelpin, Brooke L. Werneburg, Johanna Hoult, Matthew M. Clark, Paul J. Novotny, Roberto Benzo

2022American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Objective: Health coaching has the potential to improve self-management abilities (SM) in patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). Patient engagement with health care providers has a beneficial effect on patient outcomes. We examined the association of patient engagement with the health coach on SM abilities in patients with COPD. Methods: We analyzed the association between the degree of engagement measured by the Working Alliance Inventory (WAI-SR) and the SM measured by the Self-Management-Ability-Scale-30 (SMAS-30) at the end of a COPD health coaching intervention. Results: The cohort included 146 moderate to severe COPD patients. The WAI-SR total score was 85% of the maximum possible scores indicating a high degree of engagement between the health coach and the patients. The WAI-SR Task and Bond domains were positively associated with SM abilities after adjusting for lung function (FEV1 %) and depression symptoms (PHQ-2). Conclusion: The degree of engagement between a health coach and patients is associated with the perception of SM abilities in patients with COPD. Our results may inform self-management intervention and clinical practice.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCOPDHealth coachingPhysical therapyCoachingSelf-managementDepression (economics)CohortIntervention (counseling)DiseaseDisease managementInternal medicinePsychiatryPsychologyParkinson's diseaseEconomicsMachine learningPsychotherapistComputer scienceMacroeconomicsDiabetes Management and EducationChronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) ResearchChronic Disease Management Strategies