Abstract
Self-care is the ability of individuals, families and communities to promote health, prevent disease, maintain health, and cope with illness and disability with or without the support of a healthcare provider. In the field of sexual and reproductive health options for self-care predominantly include ordering contraceptives online, or testing and treating genital infections outside a healthcare setting. The shift to digitally facilitated self-care consequently requires information that was previously used by clinicians to be made available to those managing their own sexual and reproductive health. This review was specifically interested in how to optimise this informational enabling environment as self-care becomes more complex. Using a realist approach to facilitate collation, analysis and synthesis of research from multiple disciplines this review sought to enable the generation of a programme theory to inform service development. The majority of research we identified studied information to support the choice to self-care and access to self-care. In contrast to established areas of self-care, for example, the management of diabetes or hypertension, studies of the self-care process in sexual and reproductive health are lacking. There is significant potential to expand digital information resources to support sexual and reproductive health self-care, however, there are currently significant unmet informational needs. This review proposes six key recommendations for providers and key stakeholders involved with sexual and reproductive healthcare for the improvement of digital self-care services.
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