# Factors influencing chronic disease self-management behaviors: a national multilevel analysis in China

**Authors:** Kai Li, Yufan Chen

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1712419 · Frontiers in Public Health · 2026-01-07

## TL;DR

This study explores how access to physicians and individual factors affect chronic disease self-management in China, finding that vulnerable groups and lower health literacy hinder effective self-care.

## Contribution

The study introduces a multilevel analysis linking individual and city-level factors to chronic disease self-management in China.

## Key findings

- Vulnerable groups like older adults and rural residents showed significantly poorer self-management behaviors.
- Health literacy and self-efficacy strongly predicted better chronic disease self-management.
- More physicians per 1,000 population improved self-management across cities.

## Abstract

This study employed multilevel analysis to examine the impact of the prefecture-level city level variable (number of physicians per 1,000 population) on chronic disease self-management behavior (CDSMB) among Chinese adults, while also investigating the effects of individual-level control variables on CDSMB.

A cross-sectional survey of 1,916 adults across 120 cities, using data from the “Psychology and Behavior Investigation of Chinese Residents” (PBICR), evaluated Chronic Disease Self-Management Behavior (CDSMB) via CDSMS. Key predictors included individual-level control variables: health literacy (HLS-SF12), self-efficacy (NGSES), family health (FHS-SF), and the prefecture-level city level variable of physicians per 1,000 population. Hierarchical linear modeling (HLM) was used to analyze the nested data, with adjustments for demographic covariates.

Vulnerable groups (older adults, rural residents, low-income, education individuals) exhibited significantly poorer self-management (p < 0.001). At the individual level control variables, health literacy (β = 3.075, p < 0.001) and self-efficacy (β = 1.891, p < 0.001) positively predicted CDSMB, while family health showed an unexpected negative effect (β = −1.784, p < 0.001). At the prefecture-level city level, physicians per 1,000 population (β = 0.077, p < 0.05) explained 17% of between prefecture-level city level variance in CDSMB.

Based on the findings highlighting the influence of physicians per 1,000 population and individual-level control variables on chronic disease self-management, targeted optimization of medical resource allocation and focused support for vulnerable groups are needed to improve chronic disease management.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Chronic Disease (MESH:D002908)

## Full text

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## References

58 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12819611/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12819611