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:
- Extroversion: outgoing social nature/ Introversion: solitary nature
- Neuroticism: guilt-ridden nature/ Emotional stability: contented nature
- 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)
- Internal: consider themselves prime determinant heir health state
- Health Locus of control: perception one’s health under personal/professionals/external factors control
- 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:
- Cognitive: belief about attitude-object (smoking is cool)
- Emotional: feelings towards attitude-object (Smoking is pleasurable)
- Behavioural (or intentional): intended actions towards attitude-object (I am going to smoke)
- Ambivalence: existence positive/negative evaluations of attitude-object
- Social desirability bias: people report about oneself/one’s behaviour in way thought to meet with social (or interviewer) approval.
- Implicit attitude: attitudes activate unintentionally in response symbolic presence of an attitude-object (stimulus) and which therefore don’t require cognitive effort of explicit attitudes.
- Personal relevance and perceived risk --> shape/challenge/change initial attitudes
Risk perception:
- Individually generated cognitions, extent person considers themselves as facing potential harm
- Unrealistic optimism (optimistic bias): less likely than comparable others to develop illness/experience negative event.
- Lack personal experience with behaviour/problem concerned
- Belief individual actions prevent problem
- Belief if problem has not emerged yet, it won’t future
- Belief problem is rare
- --> Importance asses context which beliefs arise
Self-efficacy:
- Less predictive outcome: when competence one’s performance unrelated to outcome
Sociocognitive models behaviour change:
- Describe how encode/process/interpret/remember and then learn from and use information form social interaction --> to make sense behaviour others/world
- Social cognitions: shape judgments/attitudes/responses --> shape behaviour
- Behaviour 3 types expectations:
- Situation-outcome expectations
- Outcome expectations
- Self-efficacy expectations
- --> Social cognitive theory: expectancies may provide incentives to change
The Health Belief Model (HBM):
- Cognitive model, likelihood person engage particular health behaviour depend demographic factors --> 4 beliefs arise from internal/external cue to action (examples obesity)
- Perception of threat: ideas about how obesity affects heart/vascular diseases
- Evaluation behaviour: realization you’re overweight
- Cues to action:
- Internal: being out of breath when walking
- External: watching cooking program
- Health motivation: health improve after fighting obesity
- Critics:
- Says nothing element working together --> other studies evidence interaction elements
- Benefits should be weighed against obstacles
- Suggests beliefs occur simultaneously, is a static model
- Importance severity of disease --> studies show not necessarily major impact on behaviour
- Limited attention social/Mood influence
- Overestimate role of threat
The Theory of Reasoned Action (TRA):
- Behaviour determined someone’s view/perceptions/expectations about behaviour --> focus goal
- Intention: proximally influences behaviour, and it’s influenced by attitudes
- Outcome expectancy belief: someone’s expectation outcome value --> motivation behind behaviour
- Attitudes & Subjective norm: someone who does not feel like losing weight, might do so because subjective norms convince them
The Theory of planned behaviour:
- Conscious/controlled behaviour --> alleged control: variable to include uncontrolled behaviour
- Beliefs: formed by behaviour and possible success in past
- Illness representation: beliefs particular illness/state of ill health --> explain 22% variation behaviour, TPB adds 7%
- Variables not included model, also predict behaviour:
- Moral norms (not only social norms)
- Regret earlier behaviour
- Identity (someone sees himself as environmentally aware)
- Implementation intentions (II): intention/behaviour step in between. About making specific plans
- Goal intention: describes behaviour will take place, but nothing about when/where/with whom/how
- --> TRA and TPB static models, unlike phase models, describe different steps
Stage models of behaviour change:
- System define stages
- Order stages
- Similar barriers within same stage
- Different barriers at different stage
Transtheoretical model (TTM):
- Processes/problems differ per face and are independent
- Pre-contemplation: does not think about changing behaviour, not intention change in 6 months
- Contemplation: realization something might have to change --> start looking info about problem/healthier behaviour
- Preparation: ready change and make plans --> motivation + believing yourself important
- Action: starts with healthy behaviour --> realistic goals + social support important
- Maintenance: continues healthy behaviour and resist temptation
- Termination: individual idea of falling back into healthy behaviour
- Relapse: falling back old behaviour or going back one phase
Precaution Adoption Process Model (PAPM):
- Assume people go step by step though faces, but no specific time for transitions determined
- Unaware: not aware health hazard
- Unengaged: aware of risk, but there is unrealistic optimism
- Consideration: considering something should happen and whether they’re willing to change things
- Decide not to act: aware risk, decide not to change behaviour
- Decide to act: make decision take action
- Action: action
- Final stage: not always reached by everyone, questionable how long new behaviour will be sustained
The Health Action Process Approach (HAPA):
- Model phases, transition intention/behaviour included
- Belief own abilities/action plans major role model
- Motivation phase: awareness risk content/personal aspects contribute to this
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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