Summary of Chapter 2 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

This is the Chapter 2 of the book Introduction to Health Psychology (Val Morrison_ Paul Bennett) 4th Edition. Which is content for the exam of the component Health Psychology of Module 5 (Health Psychology & Applied Technology) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands. 

Ch. 2: Health inequalities

Health differentials: 

Environmental and social factors influence on health

  • Socio-economic status (SES): measure of social class
  • Health differential: differences in health status and life expectancy across different groups

    Evidence:

    • Lower respiratory tract infections: infections in parts of the respiratory system. It's the most common cause of death among poverty
    • Health USA: they scored badly in the WHO, because of:
      • Native Americans/inner-city poor
      • HIV
      • Cancers relating tobacco use
      • Violence

    Socio-economic health inequalities:

    • It is defined as health-behaviour choices, availability such choices, and the social context
    • Does SES influence health, or does health influences SES?
      • Social causation model: low health causes health problems --> more predictable of SES
        • Coronary heart disease (CHD): narrowing blood vessels that supply blood and oxygen to heart --> Individuals with low SES, more than twice as likely to develop CHD
      • Social drift model: when people develop health problem --> they are unable tp maintain the workload, the levels of overtime required to maintain that standard of living.

    Different health behaviours:

    • Premature mortality: death before age that is normally expected (65 years) --> Behaviours of people of low SES are more health-damaging and less health-promoting than behaviours of people of high SES

    Access to health care:

    • USA:

      • 18%: with health insurance --> they report financial barriers that prevent them from appropriate care
      • 13%: accessed to appropriate medication
    • UK: economic barriers less stark
    • Coronary artery bypass grafts: surgical procedure, to improve blood flow (CHD) --> although high percentage in SES received it, poorer population remined relatively deprived of this health care
    • Statins: drug to reduce cholesterol levels --> High SES are more likely to be prescribed statins

    Environmental factors:

    • Low SES is exposed to health damaging environments:

      • Working in dangerous settings
      • Low-quality housing --> respiratory health damaged and high levels of stress hormones
        • Atheroma: fatty deposit in intima (inner lining) artery
        • Renting: more at risk of developing CHD
          • Experience more damp
          • Earn less
          • Psychological consequences of living in differing accomodation
    • Psychological pathways: illustrates the differences of exercise facilities, traffic safety, and poor environment conditions, in low SES and high SES.

    Stress hypothesis:

    • Childhood: family instability/overcrowding/diet/education
    • Adolescence: family/exposure smoking/poor qualifications/unemployment or low-paid
    • Adulthood: working conditions/financial insecurity/unemployment/control work or home life/social interactions
    • Older age: occupational pension/heating system/food
    • Hierarchy-health hypothesis: states that when someone is aware of their position in the socioeconomic hierarchy --> influence on health
    • Wealth disparities in society, wider wealth disparities when there are low levels of social cohesion and of social capital: feelings social cohesion and trust in the neighbours 

    Work and stress:

    • Karasek and Theorell (1990) model: work environment contributes to stress and illness
    1. Demand job
    2. Degree freedom decisions on how to cope with demands
    3. Social support
    • Classic “stressed executive”: defines stress as an outcome of the demands, instead of as the demands combined with the degree of job autonomy and social support
    • Ambulatory blood pressure: blood pressure measured at certain period of time --> showed significantly higher blood pleasure when individual is at work
    • Model of work (Siegrist et al., 1990): effort --> reward
    • High levels work stress -->

      • High workload
      • Low social support
      • High effort-reward imbalance

    Work-life balance:

    • Work-home spillover: continuation of responsibilities at home after work

    Unemployment:

    • Financial insecurity

    Minority health status:

    • Prevalence of different diseases varies across ethnic groups

      • Afro-Caribbean population --> high rates of hypertension (blood pressure significantly above normal levels) and strokes (damage brain, either bleed into the brain tissue or blockage of the artery, which prevents oxygen from getting to the brain)

    Health behaviours:

    • Behavioural hypothesis: variations in health outcomes are explained by differences in behaviours across ethnic groups

    Stress:

    • Specific stressors: Psychological impact of being part of a minority status

      • Discrimination
      • Racial harassment
      • Demands maintain/shift culture
    • John Henryism: stated that successful black individuals have to push harder than white equivalents to achieve same level of success --> higher blood pressure reflects such effort

    Gender and health:

    • Life expectancy: UK

      • Men: 77.4 years
      • Women: 81.6 years
    • Differences in industrialised countries, in some countries women are more likely to get premature illnesses or to mortality due to pregnancy, and poor environment
    • Risk ratios: compares probability of certain events occurring in 2 groups.
      • Risk ratio = 1: event equally likely in both groups
      • Risk ratio > 1: event more likely first group
      • Risk ratio < 1: event less likely in first group

    Biological factors:

    • Women grater resistance infections
    • High levels testosterone, protective against CHD --> high testosterone associated with low levels of HDL cholesterol (good cholesterol)
    • Physiological response to stress:
      • Men: greater increase stress hormone and blood pressure in response to stressors

    Behavioural differences:

    • Women less alcohol
    • Men eat more meat
    • Men less likely seek help
    • Men engage more leisure exercise (health-promoting behaviour)
    • Inequalities power à impact health women

    Economical/social factors:

    • Women economically inactive and with lower-paid jobs --> have problems associated with low SES

     

     

    Check more related content in this bundle:

    Bundle Summary of Chapters of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

    Summary of Chapter 1 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

    Summary of Chapter 1 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

    This is the Chapter 1 of the book Introduction to Health Psychology (Val Morrison_ Paul Bennett) 4th Edition. Which is content for the exam of the component Health Psychology of Module 5 (Health Psychology & Applied Technology) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands. 

    Ch.1 : What is health?

    • Health is wholeness, including mental and physical aspects.

    Mind/body:

    • Humoral theory: Health is viewed as 4 circulating fluids, which are balanced (yellow bile, phlegm, blood and black bile)
      • Hippocrates, considered body and mind as one unit --> and stated that specific bodily humours were related to particular personalities.
      • This theory explains that the mind and the body are interrelated. But then, physical and mental disturbances both were said to have an underlying physical cause. The mind itself was not thought to play a role  
    • Illness aetiology: the cause of illness
    • Dualism: body and mind are separate entities
      • Material: body
      • Non-material: not objective or visible, such as thoughts and feelings
    • Anatomical research: Body of research that determined that diseases were located in human cells, and not in ill-balanced humours.
      • Mechanistic: an approach that reduces behaviour to organs and physical function.
      • Biomedical model: human behaviour reduced to and explained at, the level of cells, neural activity or biochemical activity.

    Biomedical model:

    • Health = absence of symptoms
    • Illness results outside the body or in involuntary internal changes
    • Reductionism: it ignores evidence that different people respond in different ways to the same underlying disease pathology

    Challenges to dualism:

    • Placebo effect: an inactive substance that leads to the report of reductions in pain
    • Sigmund Freud: talked about consciousness and unconsciousness, and he reported physical disturbances where no underlying physical explanation was present. Meaning that it was curable through accessing the unconscious.
    • Biopsychosocial: diseases and symptoms explained by a combination of physical, social, cultural and psychological factors.

    The biopsychosocial model of illness:

    • The model draws emphasis on the interaction of body and mind + biological processes + psychological and social influences
    • Mortality: it represents the number of deaths in a given population and/or in a given year ascribed to a given condition
    • Incidence: it represents the number of new cases of a disease occurring in a defined time interval.
    • Prevalence: it represents the number of established cases of a disease in a population at any one time.
    • Health psychologists: try to demonstrate that one’s own behaviour contributes to their health and mortality --> understanding why we behave and how to change behaviour
    • Mid-twentieth century --> health was either seen as “fitness to work” or “sick role”.

    Theories of health:

    • Health is related to feelings, symptoms, and performance --> relative state of being
    • Health behaviour: the behaviour that protects, promotes or maintains
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    Summary of Chapter 2 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

    Summary of Chapter 2 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

    This is the Chapter 2 of the book Introduction to Health Psychology (Val Morrison_ Paul Bennett) 4th Edition. Which is content for the exam of the component Health Psychology of Module 5 (Health Psychology & Applied Technology) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands. 

    Ch. 2: Health inequalities

    Health differentials: 

    Environmental and social factors influence on health

    • Socio-economic status (SES): measure of social class
    • Health differential: differences in health status and life expectancy across different groups

      Evidence:

      • Lower respiratory tract infections: infections in parts of the respiratory system. It's the most common cause of death among poverty
      • Health USA: they scored badly in the WHO, because of:
        • Native Americans/inner-city poor
        • HIV
        • Cancers relating tobacco use
        • Violence

      Socio-economic health inequalities:

      • It is defined as health-behaviour choices, availability such choices, and the social context
      • Does SES influence health, or does health influences SES?
        • Social causation model: low health causes health problems --> more predictable of SES
          • Coronary heart disease (CHD): narrowing blood vessels that supply blood and oxygen to heart --> Individuals with low SES, more than twice as likely to develop CHD
        • Social drift model: when people develop health problem --> they are unable tp maintain the workload, the levels of overtime required to maintain that standard of living.

      Different health behaviours:

      • Premature mortality: death before age that is normally expected (65 years) --> Behaviours of people of low SES are more health-damaging and less health-promoting than behaviours of people of high SES

      Access to health care:

      • USA:
        • 18%: with health insurance --> they report financial barriers that prevent them from appropriate care
        • 13%: accessed to appropriate medication
      • UK: economic barriers less stark
      • Coronary artery bypass grafts: surgical procedure, to improve blood flow (CHD) --> although high percentage in SES received it, poorer population remined relatively deprived of this health care
      • Statins: drug to reduce cholesterol levels --> High SES are more likely to be prescribed statins

      Environmental factors:

      • Low SES is exposed to health damaging environments:
        • Working in dangerous settings
        • Low-quality housing --> respiratory health damaged and high levels of stress hormones
          • Atheroma: fatty deposit in intima (inner lining) artery
          • Renting: more at risk of developing CHD
            • Experience more damp
            • Earn less
            • Psychological consequences of living in differing accomodation
      • Psychological pathways: illustrates the differences of exercise facilities, traffic safety, and poor environment conditions, in low SES and high SES.

      Stress hypothesis:

      • Childhood: family instability/overcrowding/diet/education
      • Adolescence: family/exposure smoking/poor qualifications/unemployment or low-paid
      • Adulthood: working conditions/financial insecurity/unemployment/control work or home life/social interactions
      • Older age: occupational pension/heating system/food
      • Hierarchy-health hypothesis: states that when someone is aware of their position in the
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      Summary of Chapter 3 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

      Summary of Chapter 3 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

      This is the Chapter 3 of the book Introduction to Health Psychology (Val Morrison_ Paul Bennett) 4th Edition. Which is content for the exam of the component Health Psychology of Module 5 (Health Psychology & Applied Technology) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands. 

      Ch. 3: Health-risk behaviour

      Health behaviour:

      • Health behaviour Kasl and Cobb (1966a): They defined it as any activity undertaken by a person believing themselves to be healthy for purposes of preventing disease or detecting it at an asymptomatic stage
      • Health behaviour Harries and Guten (1979): They used the same definition but includex behaviour of “unhealthy” people
        • Crucial assumption --> behaviour motivated with the goal of health
      • Health behaviour Matarazzo (1984):
        • Behavioural pathogen: damaging to health
        • Behavioural immunogen: health-protective
      • Almeda seven: behaviours reduce the development disease and mortality. Increases awareness of behaviours and diseases.
        • Women performed 6 out of 7, lived 7/11 more years
      1. Sleeping (7 to 8 hours)
      2. Not smoking
      3. Alcohol (no more than 1 to 2 per day)
      4. Exercise (regular basis)
      5. Not eating between meals
      6. Breakfast
      7. Weight (no more than 10% overweight)

      Heath-risk behaviour:

      • 8 risk factors account for 61% of cardiovascular deaths:
      1. Alcohol
      2. Tobacco
      3. High blood pressure
      4. High BMI
      5. High cholesterol
      6. High blood glucose
      7. Low fruit and vegetable intake
      8. Physical inactivity
      • Behaviours associated with mortality:
        • Heart disease: tobacco/high-cholesterol diet/lack of exercise
        • Cancer: tobacco/alcohol/diet/sexual behaviour
        • Stroke: tobacco/high-cholesterol/alcohol
        • Pneumonia: tobacco/vaccination
        • HIV: unsafe sexual intercourse
      • Disability-adjusted life years: years lost due to ill health/disability/early health --> it's a combination of mortality and morbidity

      Smoking/drinking/drug use:

      • Morbidity: cost associated with an illness, such as disability or injury
      • Age-specific mortality: deaths per 100,000, per annum, certain age groups --> (example) compare formal smokers with current smokers

      Smoking:

      • Worldwide, 9% of deaths
      • Interventions are effective when combining age-relevant risk information and support

      Alcohol:

      • Social use of alcohol is widespread
      • Recommended levels of drinking:
        • Women: no more than 2 drinks per day on average
        • Men: not more 3 drinks per day on average
        • Not exceed 4 drinks on one occasion
        • Don’t drink in specific situations (pregnant/driving/...)
        • Abstain drinking at least once a week

      Condom use:

      • Prior to HIV, sexual behaviour was under-researched
      • Condom use begins to decline after 6 months within any given relationship
      • Barriers to safe sex:
        • Alcohol --> tendency towards general risk-taking behaviours
        • Social desirability bias: tendency to answer questions about oneself/one’s behaviour in a way that meets social (or interviewer) approval
        • Women:
          • They expect male objection to condom use
          • Difficulty/embarrassment
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      Summary of Chapter 4 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

      Summary of Chapter 4 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

      This is the Chapter 4 of the book Introduction to Health Psychology (Val Morrison_ Paul Bennett) 4th EditionWhich is content for the exam of the component Health Psychology of Module 5 (Health Psychology & Applied Technology) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands. 

       

      Ch. 4: Health-protective behaviour

      Adherence behaviour:

      Definition and measurement:

      • Compliance: behaviour which conforms with “doctors’ orders”
      • Adherence: person sticks to/cooperates with/advice about medication (or lifestyle change) in a more collaborative practitioner-patient relationship --> influenced individual/environmental factors (healthcare practices)
        • 60% of drug needed daily, any less defined as non-adherence
      • Concordance: agreement physician/patient as to what appropriate treatment (not describe adherence behaviour, but more the conditions in which to encourage it)

      Do people adhere?

      • Gather data: combine self-/other- report, with biological measurements/pill counts/electronic monitoring systems
      • Adherence rate vary:
        • Treatment complexity (timing medicines/…)
        • Individual beliefs/actual illness severity

      Cost of non-adherence:

      • Hospital readmission
        • UK --> £200 million per year due t repeat admissions to hospital

      Why not adhere:

      • Patient-related factors: self-efficacy beliefs
      • Condition-related factors: symptom type, perceived severity
      • Treatment-related factors: number/type/timing/side-effects
      • Socioeconomic factors: access to dispensing pharmacy/social isolation
      • System-related factors
      • Nonadherence behaviour:
        • Intentional non-adherence: “I stopped taking my pills as they made me feel sick”
        • Unintentional non-adherence: “Sometimes I forget…”
      • Influences:
        • Micro level: personality
        • Macro level: cultural/political context
        • Meso level: social institutions

      Healthy Diet:

      • Low intake fruit/vegetables --> responsible for over 3 million deaths yearly

      Fruit/vegetables

      • Essentials healthy body: 5 per day
        • Vitamins
        • Folic acid
        • Antioxidants: oxidation of low-density lipoprotein (LDL/bad cholesterol) --> some chemical properties (polyphenols) of substances (red wine) inhibit process of oxidation
        • Fibre
      • Meta-analysis: review/re-analysis of pre-existing quantitative datasets, combines analysis to provide large samples/high statistical power to draw reliable conclusions about specific effects
        • Vegetarians lower cancer incidence/lower rates of ischaemic heart disease: restriction of blood flow to heart

      Why problem with intake?

      Food preferences:

      • Biological preferences/social + cultural factors
        • Parents major role patterns eating/food choices/leisure activities/rules & guidelines as to what considered appropriate behaviour
      • Food Dudes: pre-/primary-school children UK --> programme draws on learning theory techniques of increased taste exposure to fruit/vegetables
        • Cartoon youth characters reinforcement by means of rewards for fruit/vegetable eating

      Exercise:

      • Physical inactivity: 4th leading risk factor for global mortality
      • Exercise: health-protective, reduce risk of developing -->
        • Cardiovascular/CHD
        • Type 2 diabetes mellitus
        • Osteoporosis: reduction bone density due to calcium loss
        • Obesity
        • Some forms of cancer --> colorectal/breast cancer

      Recommendations:

      • Adults [18-64]:
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      Summary of Chapter 5 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

      Summary of Chapter 5 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

      This is the Chapter 5 of the book Introduction to Health Psychology (Val Morrison_ Paul Bennett) 4th Edition. Which is content for the exam of the component Health Psychology of Module 5 (Health Psychology & Applied Technology) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands. 

       

      Ch.5: Health behaviour explained

      Distal influences health behaviour:

      • Proximal: beliefs/attitudes towards health-risk/health-protective behaviour. Can mediate distal influences
        • Teenage seek autonomy --> smoking behaviour/take health-related decisions for themselves
      • Mediator: explain how/why relationship exists between 2 variables --> effects age upon behaviour, mediated health beliefs
      • Moderator: explain conditions under which relationship between variables exist à individual beliefs/behaviour different depending gender/health status

      Personality:

      • Particularly enduring traits regardless situation
      • Eysenck’s three-factor model: personality reflected scores along 3 dimensions:
      1. Extroversion: outgoing social nature/ Introversion: solitary nature
      2. Neuroticism: guilt-ridden nature/ Emotional stability: contented nature
      3. Psychoticism: antisocial nature/ Self-control: considerate, obedient nature
      • McCrae and Costa’s five-factor model: (the Big Five)
        • 4 of those validated different cultures --> relatively stable and enduring
        • Conscientiousness: health-protective behaviour --> Neuroticism: health-risk behaviour
          • Neophobia: chronic fear of anything new
      • Locus of control: trait distinguish attribute responsibility for event to themselves (internal LoC) or external factors (external LoC)
        • Health Locus of control: perception one’s health under personal/professionals/external factors control
          • Internal: consider themselves prime determinant heir health state
            • Low levels internal LoC, higher perceived risk/lower intention engage prevention
          • External/chance: external forces determine health state
          • Powerful others: health state determined actions powerful others(health professionals)
      • Perceived behavioural control: beliefs personal control over specific action/behaviour --> about behaviourally specific and proximal constructs
      • Self-efficacy: belief one can perform particular behaviour in given set circumstances
      • Dispositional pessimism: generally negative outlook on life, tendency anticipate negative outcomes.

      Self-determination theory:

      • Personality effect motivations (intrinsic/extrinsic) for behaviour --> motivation from inherent personal satisfaction/reward
      • Extent behaviour is self-motivated. Influenced by needs of competence/autonomy/relatedness others

      Social influences:

      • Learn form experiences/vicariously
      • Social norm: implicit/explicit approval for certain behaviours/values/beliefs
      • Descriptive norms: assumptions of what relevant others do
      • Injunctive norms: norms proscribe bow others want you to behave

      Self-regulation behaviour:

      • Health protective/risk behaviours: based outcome expectancies, thus behaviours tend to be goal-directed --> Social cognition theory: highlights explanatory role of cognitive factors
      • Self-regulation: cognitive/behavioural processes, guide/control/modify/adapt to responses --> enable achieve desired outcomes/reduce undesired outcomes --> maintain sense of normal function
        • SMART: goal-setting related behavioural change techniques
        • Inability control --> may increase impulsivity/risk-taking behaviour
        • Attentional control: extent person focus activities/goals and avoid being distracted
        • Action control: self-regulation of behaviour

      Models of Health Behaviour:

      • Attitudes: common-sense representations hold in relation to objects/people/events --> relatively enduring and generalisable, made up 3 related parts:
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        Summary of Chapter 6 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        Summary of Chapter 6 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        This is the Chapter 6 of the book Introduction to Health Psychology (Val Morrison_ Paul Bennett) 4th Edition. Which is content for the exam of the component Health Psychology of Module 5 (Health Psychology & Applied Technology) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands. 

        Ch. 6: Behind changing behaviour

        Development interventions:

        General Health Interventions: change behaviour entire population

        • PRECEDE-PROCEED model: identifies a range of psychosocial variables that could be the target of any intervention
          • Predisposing factors: knowledge/attitudes/personal preferences/existing skills and self-efficacy in relation desired behaviour
          • Enabling factors: environment facilitate behaviour changes (availability and accessibility of resources)
          • Reinforcing factors: factors reward desired behaviour change (ex: social support/economic rewards/social norms)
        • Phases of implementaton:
        1. Social diagnosis: planners impression health problems affect community
        2. Epidemiological/behavioural/environmental diagnosis: identification and assessment health issues, and related behavioural and environmental influences
        3. Educational and ecological diagnosis: determine how behaviour phase 2 can be changed --> identity predispositions and reinforcing factors
        4. Administrative and policy diagnosis: program consistency with policy organization
        5. Implementation of program: implementation intervention. 3 elements evaluation:
          • Process: program do as intended?
          • Impact: impact on outcome
          • Outcome: long-term effects on health

        Risk behaviour changed?

        • How do we increase motivation, change beliefs and attitudes, encourage people to work towards desired goals, and so on?
          • Stages of change (Prochaska and di Clemente): stage model --> pre-contemplation/contemplation/preparation/change/maintenance or relapse --> reasonably accurate predicting behaviour. Move back and forth along change continuum.

        Motivational change:

        • Provision of Information:
          • Novel information: does not contradict previous understandings of issues, is highly relevant to the individual, and is relatively easy to act on
          • Involve social, psychological and situational factors --> men and women found negotiation of the use of condoms, as well as their actual use, complex and embarrassing
          • Influence motivation:
            • negative consequences of health-damaging behaviour
            • Information about the ease of behavioural change
            • NICE guidelines for behaviour change: when quitting smoking
              • Outcome expectancies: Smoking causes people to die on average eight years earlier than the average
              • Personal relevance: If you were to stop smoking, you could add six years to your life, and be fitter
              • Attitude: Life is good and worth living
              • Self-efficacy: managed to quit before.
              • Descriptive norms: 30 per cent of people of your age have successfully given up smoking.
              • Subjective norm: Your wife and kids will appreciate
              • Personal/moral norms: Smoking is anti-social and you do not want your kids to start smoking
        • Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM): only individuals already interested beforehand info, will pay attention and act accordingly.
          • Peripheral processing: not motivated, not involved, incongruent beliefs --> maximize credibility/attractiveness message through use indirect cues/info
          • Motivated to receive argument when:
            • Congruent
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        Summary of Chapter 7 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        Summary of Chapter 7 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        This is the Chapter 7 of the book Introduction to Health Psychology (Val Morrison_ Paul Bennett) 4th Edition. Which is content for the exam of the component Health Psychology of Module 5 (Health Psychology & Applied Technology) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands. 

         

        Ch. 7: Health problems prevented

        Screening:

        • OXCHECK Study Group (1994): invited to attend a ‘health check’, participants were advised healthy-initiatives when necessary --> one-year follow-up, participants’ blood pressure levels were lower than those of people who did not take part in the screening programme
        • Body Mass Index: measurement relative percentages of fat/muscle mass body à BMI = weight (kg) divided by height (m) squared
        • Colposcopy: low-power microscope to identify cells may develop into cancer of the cervix. Sometimes follows a cervical smear if abnormalities are found.
        • Cervical smear: smear of cells taken from cervix --> examine presence of cell changes indicating risk of cancer.

        Motivational interviewing:

        • Integration of motivational interviewing or similar techniques within more complex intervention programmes --> really adds to the effectiveness of the programme

        Problem-focused approaches:

        • Health Action Process Approach (HAPA; Schwarzer and Renner 2000): identified planning as an important determinant of behavioural change. These approaches have simply encouraged individuals to plan when, how, or under what circumstances they will engage in their behaviour of choice

        Reducing anxiety:

        Barriers to attending screening for risk of disease is anxiety about its outcome

        • Risk assessment process: patients given the coping booklet were less anxious
        1. Coping booklet: information about the procedure they were about to experience, information on the likely outcomes of the procedure, and instructions on relaxation and distraction techniques could use to help them to cope before and during the procedure
        2. Medical booklet: more details on the nature of cervical abnormalities, the procedure and its likely outcomes, not suggest any coping strategies

        Mass media:

        • ‘Hypodermic’ model of behavioural change: assumed a relatively stable link between knowledge, attitudes and behaviour
          • “if we could ‘inject’ appropriate information into the recipients, this would change their attitudes and in turn influence their behaviour”
        • Adequate source:
          • Expert
          • Account population
        • Huberty et al. 2012: media campaigns are best used to raise awareness of health issues rather than attempts to engender significant behavioural change,
        • Cumulative effects: repeating media campaigns --> change people’s beliefs/behaviours
        • Methods to maximise media effectiveness:
          • Refining communication to maximise its influence on attitudes
            • Elaboration Likelihood Model: information containing carefully chosen peripheral cues can facilitate attitudinal change in people who are relatively unmotivated to consider particular issues --> enhanced effectiveness when combined with central processing
          • use of fear messages
        • If fear messages are used, they need to be accompanied with simple, easily accessible
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        Summary of Chapter 9 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        Summary of Chapter 9 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        This is the Chapter 9 of the book Introduction to Health Psychology (Val Morrison_ Paul Bennett) 4th Edition. Which is content for the exam of the component Health Psychology of Module 5 (Health Psychology & Applied Technology) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands. 

         

        Ch.9: Symptoms experienced and interpreted

        Sensation illness:

        • Illness: changes in bodily sensations and functions, goes to the doctor. Includes changes in bodily functions (e.g. increased frequency of urination), emissions (such as blood in one’s ­ urine), sensations (e.g. numbness, loss of vison) and unpleasant sensations (e.g. fever, pain, nausea)
          • views about health --> prior experience of illness and their understanding of medical knowledge
        • Disease: wrong organs, cells or tissues

        Perception symptoms:

        Sick recognition process: 1. Noticing, 2. Interpreting, 3. Planning/take action

        • The attentional model of Pennebaker (1982): competition for attention between multiple internal or external cues or stimuli leads to the same physical sign or physiological change going unnoticed in some contexts but not in others.
        • The cognitive–perceptual model of Cioffi (1991): processes of interpretation of physical signs and influences upon their attribution as symptoms while also acknowledging the role of selective attention

        Bodily signs --> increased likelihood symptom perception:

        • Bodily signs: are physical sensations that may or may not be symptoms of illness.
        • Symptoms: defined as what is experienced and, as such, they are more subjective (unreliable indicators of the need for medical attention’)
          • Symptoms receiving attention:
            • Painful or disruptive: if a bodily sign has consequences for the person
            • Novel: (considered rare and serious) subjective estimates of prevalence significantly influence
              • (1) the perceived severity of a symptom
              • (2) whether the person will seek medical attention
            • Persistent: a bodily sign is more likely to be perceived as a symptom if it persists for longer than is considered usual
            • Pre-existing chronic disease: past or current illness experience has a strong influence upon somatisation (i.e. attention to bodily states) and increases the number of other symptoms perceived

        Attentional states:

        • Competition of Cues Theory: competition attention internal/external cues --> notice physical signs in some context, not notice in others
          • Stroop Task: demonstrated that previous experience with an illness can increase a person’s attentional bias --> anxiety is commonly implicated in enhanced attention to potential or actual health threats.
          • Placebo response: manifested by attentional processes --> demonstration of the power of expectation.
        • Primary Attentional System (PAS): operate below the level of consciousness and acts on stored representations, such as illness schema which it automatically selects from.
          • Mass Psychogenic Illness: illustrates the powerful effect of anxiety on our perceptions and behaviour --> heightens a person’s attention to their own bodily signs and
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        Summary of Chapter 10 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        Summary of Chapter 10 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        This is the Chapter 10 of the book Introduction to Health Psychology (Val Morrison_ Paul Bennett) 4th Edition. Which is content for the exam of the component Health Psychology of Module 5 (Health Psychology & Applied Technology) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands. 

         

        Ch.10: the consultation and beyond

        Medical consultation:

        Nature of encounter:

        • Phases of consultation:
        1. relationship with the patient.
        2. reason for the patient’s attendance.
        3. verbal or physical examination
        4. considers the condition.’
        5. considers further treatment or further investigation.
        • “Good” medical consultation:
        1. Good medical knowledge
        2. Good relationship with the patient
        3. Establishing patient’s medical problem
        4. Understanding of the patient’s understanding of their problem and its ramifications
        5. Engaging the patient in any decision-making process
        6. Not rushed

        Who has the power?

        • Professional-centred Approach:
          • health professional control interview --> direct/close questions
        • Patient-centred approach:
          • Professional listens --> encouraging engagement
          • shared decision making --> only occur when there is equipoise: when there is no dominant choice of treatment
            • Example: woman with breast cancer deciding whether or not to conserve a breast with a lumpectomy: only the tumour and a small area of surrounding tissue are removed
        • Shared Decision-making consultation approach (Elwyn et al.’s 2012):
            • Choice: conveys awareness’ that a choice exists
            • Option: detailed information about options
            • Decision: based on ‘what matters most to patients’
          • Decision aids: provide patients with information both for and against a number of treatment options, encouraging them to score each item of information in terms of its desirability or lack of it
          • Partnership talk: designed to engage patients in decision-making was actually used to minimise resistance to medically suggested treatment approaches
          • Lee et al. (2002): patients with either breast cancer or who were receiving stem cell transplants (stem cells are replaced following radiotherapy or chemotherapy or diseases such as leukaemia) where they may be damaged.to identify their preferred consultation style. Minority opted for the shared decision-making approach

        Influence process of consultation:

        Working together:

        • doctor behaviour that actively benefits the consultation:
          • Reflection: paraphrasing and restating words of the speaker to show empathy and understanding
          • Mirroring: strategy in the process of reflection health professional repeats key words or the last words by a patient --> show understanding and prompts further information provision

        Culture and language:

        • Communication errors: health professionals’ overestimation of the level of language understanding --> well educated end to gain more information and to have longer consultations
        • Highly rated consultations when patient and health-care professional are ethnically similar

        Bad news:

        • Six stage SPIKES model of Baile et
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        Summary of Chapter 11 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        Summary of Chapter 11 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        This is the Chapter 11 of the book Introduction to Health Psychology (Val Morrison_ Paul Bennett) 4th Edition. Which is content for the exam of the component Health Psychology of Module 5 (Health Psychology & Applied Technology) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands. 

         

        Ch.11: Stress, health and illness

        Stress:

        • Stimulus or event external to the individual
        • Psychological transaction between the stimulus event and the cognitive and emotional characteristics of the individual
        • Physical or biological reaction

        Life events theory (Holmes and Rahe, 1967):

        Naturally occurring life events --> unitary consequences + cumulative effects

        • SRRS, Holmes and Rahe 1967: social readjustment rating scale, with values (life change units [LCU]) from 11 (minor violations of law) to 100 (maximum value was assigned to death of a spouse).
          • Social readjustment: intensity/length of time necessary to accommodate to a life event, regardless of the desirability of this event

        Limitations of life events measurement:

        • Retrospective assessment: ill people search for explanations for illness, which may include misattributions to past events.
        • Items scale not globally appropriate --> depending on, events might not be applicable
        • Items intertwined/interrelated: cancel out or enhance the effects of one another
        • LCU system assumes people rank events in a similar way
        • Inconsistencies reported with events rated as ‘severe’
        • Life events approach: does not systematically address the many internal and external factors that may moderate the relationship event/outcomes.

        Stress as a transaction:

        • Psychological theories of stress: appraisal is central to whether or not an event is deemed to be a stressor or not.
          • Hans Selye (1974): physiological responses to stressful stimuli, and differentiates -->
            • ‘Eustress’: stress associated with positive feelings or healthy states
            • ‘Distress’: bad kind of stress associated with negative feelings and disturbed bodily states.
          • Cognitive Transactional Model of Stress (Lazarus and Folkman, 1984): participants exposed stressful films while monitoring self-reported stress levels and physiological arousal
            • Video about tribal initiation rites that included genital surgery. Intervention groups, with different introductions:
              • Distancing response: intellectual description of the rites from a cultural perspective --> taking a detached view  to reduce emotional activation
              • Denial response: lecture that de-emphasised the pain the ‘willing’ initiates were experiencing and emphasised the excitement they were feeling --> view that denies any negative implications of an event or stimulus
              • Emphasise perceived threat: narrative that emphasised the pain and trauma the initiates were undergoing
              • Control: no info
              • Introductions influenced the way in which the film was seen --> appraisal processes were mediating stress responses
            • Stress Lazarus: result of an interaction between:
              • Individual’s characteristics and appraisals
              • External or internal event (stressor) environment
              • Internal or external resources a person has available to them
              • When changing
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        Summary of Chapter 14 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        Summary of Chapter 14 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        This is the Chapter 14 of the book Introduction to Health Psychology (Val Morrison_ Paul Bennett) 4th Edition. Which is content for the exam of the component Health Psychology of Module 5 (Health Psychology & Applied Technology) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands.

         

        Ch.14: impact/outcome illness, patient perspective

         

        Impact of illness:

        • Generic model of emotional and coping responses from the onset of symptoms
          • Uncertainty: tries to understand the meaning and severity of the first symptoms
          • Disruption: when it becomes evident have significant illness --> crisis characterised by intense stress and a high level of dependence on health professionals and/or other people who are emotionally close to them
          • Striving for recovery: attempting to gain some form of control over their illness by means of active coping.
          • Restoration of well-being: motional equilibrium based on an acceptance of the illness and its consequences
        • Stages of response to a cancer (Holland and Gooen-Piels, 2000):
          • Initial feelings of disbelief
          • Dysphoria: individuals gradually come to terms with the reality of their diagnosis -->  significant distress and related symptoms

        Physical outcomes:

        • Carry significant societal costs --> ability/disability, quality life, extent person is able to function independently,…

        Fatigue:

        • Prevalence --> pervasive in many chronic conditions/common in neurological conditions
        • Fatigue Assessment Scale (Michielsen et al. 2003): assessed by evaluating performance such as the speed and strength of physical movement (motor function), or derived from indices of sleep amount and quality, but is also often recorded through subjective reports
        • negative emotional correlates of fatigue increase the detrimental impact of illness on a person’s life --> relationship likely to be bidirectional

        Negative emotions:

        • Depression and anxiety:
          • Prevalence:
            • 1/3 or more of heart disease and heart attack patients, experience both.
            • stroke patients, the significant levels of emotional distress + psychosocial factors --> predicting long-term emotional outcome
          • Self-management (storylines) --> illness, can take on a life of their own, above and beyond symptom management
            • ‘becoming sick’ --> ‘rebuilding a spoiled identity’ --> ‘living a disciplined and balanced life’--> ‘mobilizing a care network’ --> ‘navigating and negotiating in the health care system’
          • HIV infection: illness with high degree of stigma --> higher levels of reported distress.
            • Punishment beliefs: infection is considered to be a ‘punishment’ for ‘inappropriate’ behaviour.
        • Loss of self: chronic illness bring about “loss of self” to the illness into their self-concept

        Responses to treatment:

        • Distress --> individuals may weigh up:
          • unwanted effects of treatment against the benefits of symptom reduction and survival gains
          • patient perceptions and expectancies of the treatment, as well as the perceived severity of symptoms
        • Entering large
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        Summary of Chapter 15 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        Summary of Chapter 15 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        This is the Chapter 15 of the book Introduction to Health Psychology (Val Morrison_ Paul Bennett) 4th Edition. Which is content for the exam of the component Health Psychology of Module 5 (Health Psychology & Applied Technology) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands.

         

        Ch.15: Impact and outcomes of illness: families/informal caregivers

        Family Affair:

        • Informal carers: untrained family members or friends, no clearly defined limits to their role
          • Positive effects of training caregivers in providing --> reduced caregiver burden, reduced anxiety and depression, and improved QoL for both the caregivers and their patients

        Expectancies of care:

        Gendered expectancies:

        Societal expectation of caring being a ‘natural’ role for women, who are ‘expected’ to find family-oriented roles fulfilling, even in the absence of financial reward

        • Caring becomes stressful -->  is judged as ‘going beyond the call of duty’ --> importance of identifying caregiver role expectations and their perceived spousal obligations

        Culture:

        • Filial piety: obligations of respecting, supporting and taking care of older family members.
          • Collectivism: belief and value systems including familism and filial responsibility or piety
          • South Asian cultures --> expectancies tend to fall on female family members
          • China --> filial obligation first extends to the eldest son, if married, his spouse.

        Willingness to care:

        • Caregiver well-being --> relationship caregiver and recipient from intrinsic motivations (principles) to care, as opposed to extrinsic motivations (guilt)
        • Ethnic minority caregivers: emphasis on familism and filial responsibility, sense of reciprocity for former parental care and support, but also out of emotional attachment
          • African-American/Hispanic/Asian-American/British-Asian
        • Rohr and Lang (2014): willingness to care in relation to the gains or losses anticipated from the role
        • Prosocial behaviour: love, empathy, trust and altruism. Presence of the hormone oxytocin (acts as a neurotransmitter in the brain appears to reduce autonomic stress responses and associated with affiliative social behaviour) --> influence on our behaviour --> willingness to care differ in oxytocin levels.
        • Caregivers may not have options other than to provide care --> demanding role seen as inescapable

        Family systems:

        • Stages in a continuum of adaptation (McCubbin and Patterson, 1982):
        1. Stage of resistance: deny or avoid the reality
        2. Stage of restructuring: acknowledge reality and start to reorganise their lives around
        3. Stage of consolidation: newly adopted roles may have to become permanent
        • Family-Systems Illness model (Rolland, 2012): more systemic, biopsychosocial approach to illness must acknowledge:
          • Illness and its likely characteristics over time
          • Those involved in family unit as they can ‘in turn influence the course of an illness and the wellbeing of an affected person’
          • Family goal: understanding of how they, as a family, function together and separately, with any gendered and cultural norms and expectations
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        Summary of Chapter 16 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        Summary of Chapter 16 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        This is the Chapter 16 of the book Introduction to Health Psychology (Val Morrison_ Paul Bennett) 4th Edition. Which is content for the exam of the component Health Psychology of Module 5 (Health Psychology & Applied Technology) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands.

         

        Ch.16: Pain

        Functional, unpleasant, and it warns us of potential damage to the body. Reflex action, pull away from its cause or to try and reduce it in some way. May also signal onset of disease

        • Congenital universal insensitivity to pain (CUIP): die at a young age because they fail to respond to illnesses of which the main symptom is pain or to avoid situations that risk
        • Phantom limb pain: feel pain in non-existent limb, sometimes for many years

        Types of pain:

        • Acute pain: lasting 3-6 six months, involving some form injury, generally pain disappears once the damaged tissue has healed. However, acute pain may be recurrent -->
          • Migraine (headache associated with changes vascular flow within the brain, with symptoms --> nausea/vomiting/sensitivity to light), headaches or trigeminal neuralgia (inflammation trigeminal nerve that causes sharp and severe facial pain)
        • Chronic pain: Lasts more than 6 months. Begins with episode of acute pain that fails to improve over time.
          • Pain with an identifiable cause
          • Pain with no identifiable cause
        1. Chronic benign pain: pain is experienced to a similar degree over time
        2. Chronic progressive pain: pain progressively worse over time
        • Nature of Pain:
        1. Type of pain: sharp and hot -->  stabbing, shooting
        2. Severity of pain: from mild discomfort to excruciating
        3. Pattern of pain: brief, continuous and intermittent.

        Living with pain:

        • Organise day around pain --> prevented from engaging in physical, social and even work activities
          • Physically demanding jobs most likely to lose them as a consequence of any physical limitations caused by pain
          • Reciprocal relationship: depression --> high levels reporting of pain symptoms. In other cases, strain living with pain and the restrictions on life --> depression
        • Bokan et al. (1981) ‘gain’ or reward associated with pain:
          • Primary (intrapersonal) gain: expressions of pain results in the cessation or reduction of an aversive consequence (e.g. household chore)
          • Secondary (interpersonal) gain: pain behaviour results in a positive outcome (e.g. expressions of sympathy or care)
          • Tertiary gain: pleasure associated with helping an individual with pain
        • Brena and Chapman (1983) ‘five Ds’: increasing inactivity
        1. Dramatization of complaints
        2. Disuse through inactivity
        3. Drug misuse in response to pain behaviour
        4. Dependency learned helplessness and impaired use of personal coping skills
        5. Disability due to inactivity
        • Good social support: less pain and better physical functioning
          • Encouraged by friends to take part in activities/more
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        Summary of Chapter 17 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        Summary of Chapter 17 of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book (Morrison & Bennet, 4th Edition)

        This is the Chapter 17 of the book Introduction to Health Psychology (Val Morrison_ Paul Bennett) 4th Edition. Which is content for the exam of the component Health Psychology of Module 5 (Health Psychology & Applied Technology) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands.

         

        Ch.17: Health and quality of life

        Coping chronic illness:

        • Therapeutic approaches:
          • Providing relevant information
            • Types of info:
              • Nature of a disease and/or its treatment
              • How to cope with disease and/or its treatment
              • Change behaviour in order to reduce risk of disease progression
            • Educational programmes: help people to manage a disease or reduce risk of further disease --> sense of control over their illness
          • Stress management training
            • Problem solving: prevent or minimise external problems
            • Cognitive restructuring: to identify and challenge stress-provoking thoughts
            • Relaxation: to reduce the physiological arousal that forms part of the stress response.
          • Written emotional expression: writing technique write about upsetting incidents

        Mindfulness:

        • Mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR): studies of the effectiveness --> patients coping better with their symptoms, improved overall well-being and quality of life, as well as improved health status

        Social support:

        Men who had experienced a radical prostatectomy benefited  from meeting with a fellow patient once a week to discuss any concerns they had and coping strategies they could use

        • Group cohesiveness
        • Information exchange
        • Feelings of being in the same situation.
        • Hope, catharsis and altruism

        Managing Illness:

        Info provision:

        • Web-based health information sites provided by the American Heart Association: personalised report of ‘scientifically accurate’ treatment options, a list of questions to ask their doctor

        Self-management training:

        • Social cognition theory: teaching how to manage their illness in a way that maximises control over their symptoms and quality of life --> increased confidence and continued application of new skills
          • Structured progressive: ensures success at each stage before progression
        • ‘One size fits all’ approach: tailored programmes that provide a number of modules that participants can select according to their particular needs
        • ‘Intensified functional insulin therapy’: intervention involve educational component --> how factors such as additional exercise and eating meals (varying levels of carbohydrate) influence their blood sugar levels
        • Heart Manual: programmes that have translated key elements of the self-management process into written or computer-based form

        Stress management training:

        • Episodes of angina: triggered by emotional as well as by physical stresses --> such interventions reduce the frequency of angina
          • Performed better on a standardised exercise known as a treadmill test: of cardiovascular fitness, gradually increase the level of exercise on a treadmill while having their heart monitored

        Social and family support:

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