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
- Sleeping (7 to 8 hours)
- Not smoking
- Alcohol (no more than 1 to 2 per day)
- Exercise (regular basis)
- Not eating between meals
- Breakfast
- Weight (no more than 10% overweight)
Heath-risk behaviour:
- 8 risk factors account for 61% of cardiovascular deaths:
- Alcohol
- Tobacco
- High blood pressure
- High BMI
- High cholesterol
- High blood glucose
- Low fruit and vegetable intake
- 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 of raising this issue with a partner
- Worry suggesting they or the partner has STDs
- Lack of self-efficacy of condom use
- Interventions: target health beliefs, but also interpersonal/communication/negotiating skills
Unhealthy diet:
- Cancer deaths: 30% attributed to smoking cigarettes/ 35% poor diet (high-fat foods/high levels salt/low levels fibre)
Fat intake:
- Excessive fat intake --> CHD/heart attack
- Cholesterol: (fat) present in our own bodily cells
- Serum cholesterol: Normal circulating cholesterol --> is synthesised to produce steroid hormones and it's involved in the production of bile (necessary for digestion) --> it's increased by fatty diet and by age.
- Fatty foods cholesterol: fat-like substance, contains lipoproteins that very in density:
- Low-density lipoproteins (LDLs): can lead formation plaques in arteries (bad cholesterol)
- High-density lipoproteins (HDLs): increase the processing and removal of LDLs by the liver (good cholesterol)
- Ratio of total cholesterol: HDL + LDL + 20% of even lower density triglycerides --> desirable ratio = 4.5:1
- Coronary Artery disease (CAD):
- Atherosclerosis: if a fat molecule (good store of energy) is not metabolised during exercise --> plaques are laid down on artery walls, which thickens and restricts blood circulation to the heart
- Arteriosclerosis: increased blood pressure causes artery walls to lose elasticity and to harden --> affecting on the ability of the cardiovascular system to adapt to increased blood flow
- Governmental policy documents “healthy eating/dietary targets”:
- Maximum of a 30% of food energy (calories) derived from fat intake, from which maximum of 11 % can come from saturated fats
Salt:
- High blood pressure
- Normotensive: normal blood pressure
- Hypertensive: high blood pressure
- Systolic blood pressure: maximum blood pressure on artery walls --> occurring left vertical output/contraction (measured in relation to diastolic blood pressure)
- Diastolic blood pressure: minimum pressure of blood wall arteries between heartbeats
- Effects persist even when performing physical activity, and obesity and other health behaviours are controlled --> need to monitor salt intake from early childhood
Obesity:
- Body mass Index (BMI): weight (kg) divided squared height (m)
- Normal weight: BMI between 20-24.9
- Mildly obese: BMI between 25-29.9 (Grade 1)
- Moderate/clinically obese: BMI between 30-39.9 (Grade 2)
- Severely obese: BMI between 40-greater (Grade 3)
Consequences:
- Underweight --> largest global cause of mortality
- Obesity:
- Hypertension
- Heart disease
- Type 2 diabetes
- Osteoarthritis
- Respiratory problems
- Lower back pain
- Some forms of cancer
- Psychological ill health --> low self-esteem/isolation (from experience of stigmatising behaviour)
Prevalence:
- 1999 --> 31% of EU adult population is overweight
- Social learning theory: influence significant others’ behaviour
- Theories of associative learning: food choice associated with receiving intrinsic and extrinsic rewards or reinforcers --> (examples) pleasure eating with family or stress reduction from “comfort eating”
Causes:
- Obesity: energy intake that grossly exceeds energy output
- Genetics:
- Greater number of fat cells
- Low metabolic rates
- Deficiencies hormone responsible appetite regulation and control
- Leptin: produced by fatty (adipose) tissue. It signals the hypothalamus of the CNS that helps regulate weight --> leptin injection does not consistently reduce the eating behaviour
- Agonist: simulates effects of neurotransmitters --> it reduces hunger
- Insufficient to cure overweight, since obesity is attributed to the interaction of physiological and environmental factors
Summary of the Introduction to Health Psychology Book by Morrison and Bennet - 4th Edition
- Summary of Chapter 1 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)
- Summary of Chapter 3 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)
- Summary of Chapter 5 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)
- Summary of Chapter 7 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)
- Summary of Chapter 10 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)
- Summary of Chapter 14 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)
- Summary of Chapter 16 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)
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