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Family self-care emphasizes a family's role in health promotion and protection, reflecting society's views on health, illness, and human relationships. In families with children with an intellectual disability, where the child may lack self-care abilities, family self-care becomes crucial, highlighting that self-care needs exceed individual capacity and require family cooperation. : This pilot study aims to explore the factors influencing family self-care and define attributes of its cognitive, psychosocial, physical, and behavioral domains in families with children with intellectual disabilities. : A descriptive and correlational study with forty-four families was conducted. Exploratory analysis and linear regression analysis were estimated through the assumptions of the Gauss-Markov theorem (specifically homoscedasticity, normality, and model specification adequacy). Multicollinearity was also evaluated. : The significant family conditioning factors identified were family income, education level, degree of physical and functional dependence of the child, family household size, and social support. Socioeconomic, demographic, and health-related factors shaped self-care experiences. : Family empowerment and the impact of disability are key elements in enabling self-care. Families reporting a greater impact of their child's condition tended to feel less empowered, directly affecting their ability to perform daily self-care activities. The evidence suggests a pattern in which self-care activities might be reactive rather than proactive and focused on managing immediate challenges rather than long-term well-being. These insights can guide healthcare professionals, especially family nurses, toward a holistic, family-centered approach to supporting families with children with intellectual disabilities.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13070791 | DOI Listing |
Health Expect
October 2025
Yorkshire Quality and Safety Research Group, Bradford Institute for Health Research, Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Bradford, UK.
Background: Older people face numerous challenges when managing multiple medicines. They are required to cope with complicated and changing medicines regimens and coordinate input from multiple health and social care professionals. When not well managed, medicines can cause harm, and older people are more susceptible to the impact of errors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCroat Med J
August 2025
Vladimir Trkulja, Department of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology, Zagreb University School Medicine, Šalata 11, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia,
Aim: To inventory the content of home pharmacies and evaluate drug keeping and self-medication practices in the households of medical and pharmacy students at Zagreb University in 2022, and to relate the findings to two previous surveys.
Methods: A cross-sectional survey enrolled 178 students who inventoried drug supplies in their family households, and interviewed household members on drug keeping and self-medication practices. Previous surveys included 287 (in 2001) and 225 (in 1977) students/households.
Palliat Med
September 2025
Department of Family Medicine, Taichung Veterans General Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan.
Background: Pain assessment in palliative care is essential, but differences between patient-reported and clinician-assessed pain can affect care decisions. Identifying factors contributing to these differences can improve pain management.
Aim: To investigate the clinical and symptom-related factors associated with variations between patient-reported and clinician-assessed pain among patients admitted to a palliative care ward.
BMC Womens Health
September 2025
Jhpiego, Islamabad, Pakistan.
Background: Evidence from multiple pilots and post-introduction scale-up initiatives have demonstrated that self-administered subcutaneous depot-medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA-SC) has potential to improve contraceptive continuation rates and expand contraceptive access to populations with limited utilization of facility-based health services. Only a few of these studies have been conducted in South Asian countries, and none where most contraceptive use is of non-hormonal methods that require limited to no contact with the health system, leaving policymakers in countries like Pakistan with limited context-specific evidence to guide decisions on whether, how, and for whom to introduce DMPA-SC.
Methods: A prospective cohort study will be conducted in 41 health facilities and surrounding communities in Punjab, Pakistan.
Ageing Res Rev
September 2025
University of Antwerp - Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences - Department of Rehabilitation Sciences and Physiotherapy - Research Group MOVANT, Antwerp, Belgium; Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Faculty of Physical Education and Physiotherapy - Department Physiotherapy, Human Physiology and Anatomy -
Introduction: Frailty in older adults impairs Activities of Daily Living (ADL). While exercise interventions improve factors like muscle strength and physical function, their direct impact on ADL ability is inconsistent. This review aims to assess the effectiveness of exercise on ADL ability, identify the most beneficial interventions, and explore mediators.
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