Health-Related Sustainable Development through Lifestyle and Self-Care
A special issue of Sustainability (ISSN 2071-1050). This special issue belongs to the section "Health, Well-Being and Sustainability".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 October 2023) | Viewed by 14181
Special Issue Editors
Interests: qualitative methods; sociology of health, self-management and chronic condition; physician-patient relationship; ethics and nursing; self-management and ageing; family and intergenerational relations
Interests: ethical issues at the interface from medical practice and public health; ethics of chronic care including self-management technologies; doctor-patient relationships
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Chronic diseases are pervasive globally and their prevalence is increasing worldwide. Chronic diseases now represent a major health burden in both advanced societies and developing ones. Individuals with chronic condition have a poorer quality of life and decreased life expectancy. There is also an impact on their economic security through the direct costs of their medical care and indirectly due to reduced workdays and employment opportunities. Societies are affected directly through increasing health care costs and indirectly through a negative impact on economic development due to decreased productivity.
Healthy lifestyle patterns and self-care of chronically ill patients are on the public agenda due to an increasing body of literature that shows that they add benefits to usual chronic care, as well as on improving primary prevention of chronic disorders. Behavioral interventions that address lifestyle changes and/or self-care could promote health related sustainability improving patients’ cognitive, affective, medical expertise, and, through all of these, improve their health outcomes and decrease health care costs.
For this Special Issue, we expect the submission of research articles, case studies, reviews, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses that address the health-related sustainability dimension of lifestyle and self-care health interventions, such as: nutrition, diet, or physical activity interventions; self-care programs for chronically ill patients, as well as their impact and ethical, psychological, and social challenges on patients’ adherence to medical treatments, patients’ health, costs of health care, physician-patient relationship, etc.
Prof. Dr. Daniela Cojocaru
Dr. Liviu Oprea
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- sustainability
- health
- self-care
- chronic disease
- lifestyle
- physical activity
- social challenges
- medical care
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