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1 May 2024 | Q&A
What is self-care?
WHO defines self-care as the ability of individuals, familiesand communities to promote health, prevent disease, maintain health, and tocope with illness – with or without the support of a health or care worker.
What are self-care interventions and actions?
Self-care interventions can include medicines, devices, diagnostics and digital tools. Self-care actions include practices, habits and lifestyle choices.
What does WHO recommend for self-care interventions?
The WHO living guideline on self-care interventions for health and well-being includes recommendations on safe and effective interventions that should be used within a supportive enabling environment. The current recommendations cover interventions for
- sexual and reproductive health and rights, including self-care options for improving antenatal, delivery, postpartum and newborn care;
- providing high-quality services for family planning, including infertility services;
- eliminating unsafe abortion;
- combating sexually transmitted infections, including HIV, reproductive tract infections, and cervical cancer;
- promoting sexual health; and
- non-communicable diseases, including mental health, cardiovascular disease and diabetes.
Examples of self-care interventions include self-administered injectable contraception, self-collection of vaginal samples for HPV screening, self-monitoring of blood glucose for diabetes, including gestational diabetes; self-monitoring of blood pressure for heart disease and managing pre-eclampsia during pregnancy, and self-tests for a range of issues such as HIV, pregnancy and COVID-19. Further interventions will be regularly added to the global guideline as the evidence-base expands.
What are the elements of an enabling environment for self-care interventions?
WHO’s conceptual framework on self-care interventions has coreelements from both people-centred and health systems approaches, underpinned bythe key principles of human rights, ethics, inclusivity and gender equality.The enabling environment includes elements, beyond health services themselves,that require attention to ensure that self-care interventions can beappropriately implemented. These include the education, justice and socialservices sectors, because self-care interventions are mostly accessed and/orused outside formal health services. For example, it is important for people tohave enough education and sufficient health and sometimes digital literacy tounderstand information about self-care interventions and make informed choicesabout their use.
Do I need to see a health or care worker to engage in self-care activities?
Self-care interventions provide individuals, families andcommunities with a way to manage their own health. They are intended as acomplement to facility-based care and may require support from the healthsystem in some instances. Some self-care actions, such as washing your hands,wearing masks and practicing good respiratory hygiene measures that protect youfrom COVID-19 do not need you to meet with a health or care worker. Otherself-care interventions, such as obtaining a prescription for hormonalcontraception or counselling during pregnancy, may need interaction with ahealth or care worker. Such support can be provided in different ways and willdepend on the healthcare arrangements in place where you live; for example,some medicines are available over the counter without a prescription in apharmacy, or counselling and important information during pregnancy and whencaring for a newborn can be provided over the phone or online.
Are self-care interventions safe?
All WHO recommendations on self-care interventions are based onthe best available evidence to date, including evidence of their safety andeffectiveness when provided alongside support from the formal health system ifneeded. WHO does not recommend use of unregulated and substandard products. Incorrector unclear health information or lack of access to health and care workersand/or health facilities, should they be needed, are potential challenges that needto be addressed when using self-care interventions.
Why are self-care interventions important during health emergencies?
In crisis settings, securing necessities such as food and shelter is the primary need. In addition, meeting people’s health needs by providing the right care at the right time can prevent or mitigate adverse health consequences. In situations where healthcare resources are scarce, self-care interventions can provide opportunities to access the appropriate care at the right time and complement limited access to facility based care. Evidence-based, high-quality self-care interventions can provide an important means of maintaining health when national health systems are disrupted and health facility or health and care worker-based services become unavailable or restricted in fragile or humanitarian settings.
In fragile and humanitarian settings, seeking and creating innovative approaches that increase efficiencies in provision, management, quality control and service integration could drive self-care interventions to becoming sustainable, accessible and effective healthcare options.
Do self-care interventions shift the burden of care to vulnerable people?
People may use self-care interventions for several reasons, including convenience, confidentiality, cost, empowerment, a better fit with lifestyle, or because they lack access to quality health services or anticipate facing stigma and discrimination. The self-care interventions and practices that WHO recommends are not intended to add to the daily workload and financial burden of individuals and communities, including those who may already be marginalized and underserved. For many self-care interventions to be effective, links to care and complementary support from the health system are essential. When integrated into health systems, self-care interventions may save money for users (including transport costs and loss of income when seeking facility based care) and health and care providers (under circumstances where complications and need for hospitalization are reduced). Blending direct user payment for self-care interventions with public subsidies and private-sector financing can help reduce large out-of-pocket expenditure on self-care for individuals and families.
Where can I get more information?
Further information about self-care can be found on the WHO website:
- WHO consolidated guideline on self-care interventions for health
- Self-care interventions for health
WHO TEAM
Sexual and Reproductive Health and Research (SRH)
Related
WHO guideline on self-care interventions for health and well-being, 2022 revision
Fact sheets