CPD Articles

An approach to persons who are not willing to engage in behavioural change

Olufemi B. Omole, Deidré Pretorius, Klaus B. von Pressentin
South African Family Practice | Vol 66, No 1 : Part 3| a5874 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/safp.v66i1.5874 | © 2024 Olufemi B. Omole, Deidré Pretorius, Klaus B. von Pressentin | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 21 November 2023 | Published: 29 August 2024

About the author(s)

Olufemi B. Omole, Division of Family Medicine, Department of Family Medicine and Primary Care, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa
Deidré Pretorius, Department of Family Medicine and Primary Care, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa
Klaus B. von Pressentin, Department of Family, Community and Emergency Care, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa

Abstract

With its unique position, primary health care (PHC) can provide health promotion and prevention services, including lifestyle behavioural counselling. Unhealthy lifestyle behaviours are very prevalent among patients attending PHC, with many patients unwilling to change or in the precontemplation stage. While patients in the contemplation stage are better managed using the 5As approach of motivational interviewing counselling, those unwilling or not ready for change necessitate a different approach, such as the 5Rs of motivational interviewing (MI) counselling. The 5Rs MI approach holds promise in motivating unwilling individuals to consider embarking on the journey of behavioural change. The 5Rs approach is not a stand-alone checklist of tasks implemented in isolation but is best integrated within a theoretical behavioural change framework. Of the four health-related behavioural change theoretical frameworks that are frequently used, the transtheoretical stages of the change model are the most used. This continued professional development article provides a summary review of the literature on behavioural change theories as they apply to lifestyle health behaviour change and presents the 5Rs approach as a feasible and practical approach to manage patients who are unwilling to change or in the precontemplation stage. This offers a beacon of hope for improved patient outcomes in a PHC system saddled with high prevalence of modifiable unhealthy lifestyle behaviours.


Keywords

unwilling persons; precontemplation; lifestyle behaviours; counselling; behavioural change; 5Rs approach.

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