L17 - Introduction to Health Psychology Flashcards
What is the WHO (1948) definition of health?
‘State of complete physical, mental and social well-being…not merely the absence of disease or infirmity’
What is the Bircher (2005) definition of health?
‘A dynamic state of well-being characterised by a physical and mental potential, which satisfies the demands of life commensurate with age, culture, and personal responsibility’
What is the Indigenous Australian people definition of health?
‘Not just the physical well-being of the individual but refers to the social, emotional, spiritual and cultural well-being of the whole community. This is a whole of life view and includes the cyclical concept of life-death-life’
What are the 2 models of health and illness?
Describe them
Biomedical model of illness
o Symptoms of illness considered to have underlying pathology
o Removal of pathology»_space; restored health
o May be mechanistic, too reductionist – ignores the fact that different people respond in different ways to illness because of differences (e.g. personality, social support, cultural beliefs)
Focuses on the fact that the mind and body are different
Biopsychosocial model of illness
o Psychological and social factors can add to biological or biomedical explanations and understanding of health and illness
o Diseases and symptoms can be explained by a combination of physical, social, cultural, and psychological factors
o Employed in health psychology, allied health professionals, and increasingly in medicine
What is health psychology?
Health psychology is an interdisciplinary field concerned with the application of psychological knowledge and techniques to health, illness and health care
Devoted to understanding psychological influences on how people:
o Stay healthy
o Why they become ill
o How they respond if they do become ill
What is a stage based model?
What models of health behaviour follow this?
Stage based model - individuals can be at ‘discrete ordered stages’ each on denoting a greater inclination to change
E.g. Transtheoretical model
What are social cognitive models?
What models of health behaviour follow this?
Health Belief Model & Theory of Planned Behaviour
What are models focusing on post intentional behaviour?
What models of health behaviour follow this?
Some researchers have developed new models to explain what happens after you form an intention to perform a behaviour
E.g. Health Action Process Approach & Temporal Self-Regulation Theory
Describe the Transtheoretical Model
Makes 2 broad assumptions
What are its strengths and limitations
Transtheoretical model provides a framework for explaining how behaviour change occurs as individuals move through stages of motivational readiness
- The model is not linear
- People can enter and exit at any point and some people may repeat a stage several times
- It implies that different interventions are appropriate at different stages of health behaviour change
Makes 2 broad assumptions:
o People move through stages of change
o Processes involved at each stage differ
Criticism
o An individual may be in several stages of change at one time
o Perhaps too much focus on motivation and intention – past behaviour is a more powerful predictor of future behaviour
o Participants stage of change may not be predictive of success of intervention
o Doesn’t consider social aspects of health behaviour, severity of illness/disease/outcome, characteristics of the individual
Describe the Health Belief Model
Criticisms
- The HBM is a social cognitive model that attempts to explain and predict health behaviours
- This is done by focusing on the attitudes and beliefs of individuals
- Explores a variety of long and short term health behaviours
According to the model, a person’s readiness to take a health action (e.g. quit smoking, start exercising, practice safe sex) is determined by four main factors:
o Perceived severity or seriousness of the disease
o Perceived susceptibility of the disease
o Perceived benefits of the health action
o Perceived barriers to performing the action
Criticisms:
o Static model
Does not allow for staged or dynamic process of change in beliefs which later models show
o Assumption that individuals are rational information processors and decisions-makers, which is not always the case
o Limited account of social influences on behaviour
Describe the Theory of Planned Behaviour model
Strengths
Criticisms
- Behaviour is thought to be proximally determined by intention
- Intention is influenced by a person’s attitude towards the behaviour (outcome expectancy, outcome value) and their perception of social pressure regarding the behaviour (subjective norm)
- Perceived behaviour control (a person’s belief that they have control over their own behaviour in certain situations – similar to self-efficacy) can directly influence health behaviour
Strengths:
- The theory of planned behaviour addresses many of the criticisms of the health belief model
- The relationship between variables is well defined
- Includes consideration of the social influences on behaviour
- Considers whether the individual feels able to perform the behaviour
Criticisms:
- However…prediction of behaviour from TPB variables is significantly lower than the prediction of intention
- Intention to change is much easier to measure compared to actually being able to change (so is this actually a thing that can be measured)
Describe the Health Action Process Approach
Requires what 2 separate processes?
Criticisms
- HAPA attempts to fill the ‘intention-behaviour gap’ by highlighting the role of self-efficacy and action plans
- It is particularly influential because it suggests that the adoption, initiation and maintenance of health behaviours must be explicitly viewed as a process that consists of at least
o A pre-intentional motivation phase
o A post intentional volition phase - It emphasises the importance of self-efficacy
- Requires two separate processes:
o Motivation (intention)
o Volition (action)
Criticisms
- Very limited literature applying HAPA to behaviour
- Too rational? Emotion may be neglected
- The social and environmental influences are not considered as directly affecting behaviour, but rather as cognitions
Describe the Temporal Self-Regulation Theory
How long does it take to break a habit?
Determined by what 3 factors?
Criticisms
- TST addresses criticism of the theory of planned behaviour
o Adds variables to explain the intention-behaviour gap - Takes 42 days to break habit, but about 6 months to completely break away from it
- It is novel in that it incorporates behavioural pre-potency (habits) and individual differences in self-regulatory capacity
- TST posits that health behaviour is proximally determined by three factors:
o Intention strength
o Behavioural pre-potency
o Self-regulatory capacity - The latter two constructs are theorised to have direct influences on behaviour and also to moderate the intention-behaviour link
Criticisms
- The body of research using temporal self-regulation theory is small (but growing!)
- We are still trying to find good ways to measure self-regulation and behavioural pre-potency
- It is unclear whether the model is better than the theory of planned behaviour (but it seems likely)