- 1: An introduction to health psychology Acknowledgements xxvii
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- THE BACKGROUND TO HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- WHAT IS THE BIOMEDICAL MODEL?
- THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
- Psychosomatic medicine
- Behavioural health
- Behavioural medicine
- Health psychology
- WHAT ARE THE AIMS OF HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY?
- WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY?
- The clinical health psychologist
- A professional health psychologist
- WHAT ARE THE AIMS OF THIS BOOK?
- A note on theory and health psychology
- A note on methodology and health psychology
- THE CONTENTS OF THIS BOOK
- THE STRUCTURE OF THIS BOOK
- QUESTIONS
- FOR DISCUSSION
- FURTHER READING
- 2: Health beliefs
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- WHAT ARE HEALTH BEHAVIOURS?
- WHY STUDY HEALTH BEHAVIOURS?
- McKeown’s thesis
- LAY THEORIES ABOUT HEALTH
- PREDICTING HEALTH BEHAVIOURS
- Attribution theory
- Health locus of control
- Unrealistic optimism
- The stages of change model
- Integrating these different health beliefs: developing models
- COGNITION MODELS
- The health belief model
- The protection motivation theory
- BEHAVIOUR FOCUS ON RESEARCH 2.1: TESTING A THEORY – PREDICTING SEXUAL
- SOCIAL COGNITION MODELS
- The theories of reasoned action and planned behaviour
- The health action process approach
- PROBLEMS WITH THE MODELS
- Conceptual problems
- Methodological problems
- Predictive problems
- new cognitions Predicting intentions: the need to incorporate
- Predicting behaviour: exploring the intention–behaviour gap
- Developing theory based interventions
- Putting theory into practice
- Existing theory based interventions
- TO CONCLUDE
- QUESTIONS
- FOR DISCUSSION
- ASSUMPTIONS IN HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- FURTHER READING
- 3: Illness cognitions
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE HEALTHY?
- WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE ILL?
- WHAT ARE ILLNESS COGNITIONS?
- Evidence for these dimensions of illness cognitions
- Measuring illness cognitions
- LEVENTHAL’S SELF-REGULATORY MODEL OF ILLNESS COGNITIONS
- Stage 1: Interpretation
- Stage 2: Coping
- Stage 3: Appraisal
- WHY IS THE MODEL CALLED SELF-REGULATORY?
- AND COPING FOCUS ON RESEARCH 3.1: TESTING A THEORY – ILLNESS REPRESENTATIONS
- Problems with assessment
- STAGE 1: INTERPRETATION
- Symptom perception
- Social messages
- STAGE 2: COPING
- Coping with a diagnosis
- Coping with the crisis of illness
- adaptation Adjustment to physical illness and the theory of cognitive
- The role of illusions
- Implications for the outcome of the coping process
- THE POSITIVE INTERPRETATION OF ILLNESS
- USING THE SELF-REGULATORY MODEL TO PREDICT OUTCOMES
- Predicting adherence to treatment
- Predicting recovery from stroke
- Predicting recovery from MI
- TO CONCLUDE
- QUESTIONS
- FOR DISCUSSION
- ASSUMPTIONS IN HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- FURTHER READING
- professionals’ health beliefs 4: Doctor–patient communication and the role of health
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- WHAT IS COMPLIANCE?
- PREDICTING WHETHER PATIENTS ARE COMPLIANT: THE WORK OF LEY
- Patient satisfaction
- Patient understanding
- FOCUS ON RESEARCH 4.1: TESTING A THEORY – PATIENT SATISFACTION
- Patient’s recall
- HOW CAN COMPLIANCE BE IMPROVED?
- The role of information
- Recommendations for improving compliance
- THE WIDER ROLE OF INFORMATION IN ILLNESS
- Information and recovery from surgery
- Using information to improve recovery
- THE ROLE OF KNOWLEDGE IN DOCTOR–PATIENT COMMUNICATION
- Problems with the traditional approach to doctor–patient communication
- The adherence model of communication
- THE PROBLEM OF DOCTOR VARIABILITY
- Explaining variability – clinical decision making as problem solving
- Explaining variability – the role of health professionals’ health beliefs
- Communicating beliefs to patients
- patient Explaining variability – an interaction between health professional and
- Patient centredness
- Agreement between health professional and patient
- TO CONCLUDE
- QUESTIONS
- FOR DISCUSSION
- ASSUMPTIONS IN HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- FURTHER READING
- 5: Smoking and alcohol use
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- WHO SMOKES?
- WHO DRINKS?
- HEALTH IMPLICATIONS OF SMOKING AND ALCOHOL USE
- Is smoking bad for health?
- Is alcohol consumption bad for health?
- WHAT IS AN ADDICTION?
- APPROACH HISTORICAL CHANGES IN ATTITUDE AND THEORETICAL
- The seventeenth century and the moral model of addictions
- The nineteenth century and the 1st disease concept
- The twentieth century and the 2nd disease concept
- The 1970s and onwards – social learning theory
- WHAT IS THE 2ND DISEASE CONCEPT?
- A pre-existing physical abnormality
- A pre-existing psychological abnormality
- Acquired dependency
- PROBLEMS WITH A DISEASE MODEL OF ADDICTION
- WHAT IS THE SOCIAL LEARNING PERSPECTIVE?
- The processes involved in learning an addictive behaviour
- Integrating a disease and social learning perspective
- THE STAGES OF SUBSTANCE USE
- STAGES 1 AND 2: INITIATING AND MAINTAINING AN ADDICTIVE BEHAVIOUR
- Smoking initiation and maintenance
- Alcohol initiation and maintenance
- Psychological predictors of alcohol limitation and maintenance
- STAGE 3: THE CESSATION OF AN ADDICTIVE BEHAVIOUR
- The process of cessation
- FOCUS ON RESEARCH 5.1: TESTING A THEORY – STAGES OF SMOKING CESSATION
- INTERVENTIONS TO PROMOTE CESSATION
- Clinical interventions: promoting individual change
- Public health interventions: promoting cessation in populations
- SMOKING BAN FOCUS ON RESEARCH 5.2: PUTTING THEORY INTO PRACTICE – WORKSITE
- Methodological problems evaluating clinical and public health interventions
- STAGE 4: RELAPSE IN SMOKING AND DRINKING
- Baseline state
- Pre-lapse state
- No lapse or lapse?
- The abstinence violation effect
- A CROSS-ADDICTIVE BEHAVIOUR PERSPECTIVE
- Smoking and eating behaviour
- TO CONCLUDE
- QUESTIONS
- FOR DISCUSSION
- ASSUMPTIONS IN HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- FURTHER READING
- 6: Eating behaviour
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- WHAT IS A HEALTHY DIET?
- HOW DOES DIET AFFECT HEALTH?
- Diet and illness onset
- Diet and treating illness
- WHO EATS A HEALTHY DIET?
- DEVELOPMENTAL MODELS OF EATING BEHAVIOUR
- Exposure
- Social learning
- Associative learning
- Problems with a developmental model
- COGNITIVE MODELS OF EATING BEHAVIOUR
- Using the TRA and TPB
- Adding extra variables
- Problems with a cognitive model of eating behaviour
- A WEIGHT CONCERN MODEL OF EATING BEHAVIOUR
- The meaning of food and weight
- What is body dissatisfaction?
- THE CAUSES OF BODY DISSATISFACTION
- SOCIAL FACTORS
- The role of the media
- Ethnicity
- Social class
- The family
- PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS
- Beliefs
- DIETING
- Dieting and undereating
- Dieting and overeating
- The causes of overeating
- FOCUS ON RESEARCH 6.1: TESTING A THEORY – OVEREATING AS A REBELLION
- Dieting and weight loss
- The role of dieting in mood and cognitive changes
- Problems with a weight concern model of eating behaviour
- TO CONCLUDE
- QUESTIONS
- FOR DISCUSSION
- FURTHER READING
- 7: Exercise
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- DEVELOPING THE CONTEMPORARY CONCERN WITH EXERCISE BEHAVIOUR
- WHAT IS EXERCISE?
- WHO EXERCISES?
- WHY EXERCISE?
- The physical benefits of exercise
- The psychological benefits of exercise
- FOCUS ON RESEARCH 7.1: TESTING A THEORY – EXERCISE AND MOOD
- WHAT FACTORS PREDICT EXERCISE?
- Social/political predictors of exercise
- FOCUS ON RESEARCH 7.2: TESTING A THEORY – PREDICTING EXERCISE
- EXERCISE RELAPSE
- TO CONCLUDE
- QUESTIONS
- FOR DISCUSSION
- ASSUMPTIONS IN HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- FURTHER READING
- 8: Sex
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- DEVELOPING THE CONTEMPORARY RESEARCH PERSPECTIVES ON SEX
- Sex as biological, for reproduction
- Sex as biological, for pleasure
- Sex as a risk to health
- Sex as interaction
- Sex as a risk and pregnancy avoidance
- What is contraceptive use?
- Who uses contraception?
- Developmental models
- Decision-making models
- contraception use Integrating developmental and decision-making approaches to
- SEX AS A RISK IN THE CONTEXT OF STDs/HIV AND AIDS
- Do people use condoms?
- Predicting condom use
- Social cognition models
- Perceptions of susceptibility – are you at risk?
- Sex as an interaction between individuals
- USE FOCUS ON RESEARCH 8.1: TESTING A THEORY – THE SITUATION AND CONDOM
- THE BROADER SOCIAL CONTEXT
- Sex education
- Power relations between men and women
- Social norms of the gay community
- Discourses about sex, HIV and illness
- TO CONCLUDE
- QUESTIONS
- FOR DISCUSSION
- ASSUMPTIONS IN HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- FURTHER READING
- 9: Screening
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- WHAT IS SCREENING?
- THE HISTORY OF THE SCREENING ETHOS
- Early screening programmes
- Recent screening programmes
- SCREENING AS A USEFUL TOOL
- GUIDELINES FOR SCREENING
- PSYCHOLOGICAL PREDICTORS OF THE UPTAKE OF SCREENING
- Patient factors
- Health professional factors
- FOCUS ON RESEARCH 9.1: TESTING A THEORY – PREDICTING SCREENING
- Organizational factors
- SCREENING AS PROBLEMATIC
- Is screening ethical?
- Is screening cost-effective?
- individual The effects of screening on the psychological state of the
- The debates
- Why has this backlash happened?
- TO CONCLUDE
- QUESTIONS
- FOR DISCUSSION
- ASSUMPTIONS IN HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- FURTHER READING
- 10: Stress
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- WHAT IS STRESS?
- THE DEVELOPMENT OF STRESS MODELS
- Cannon’s fight or flight model
- Selye’s general adaptation syndrome
- Life events theory
- A ROLE FOR PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS IN STRESS
- The transactional model of stress
- Does appraisal influence the stress response?
- What events are appraised as stressful?
- Self-control and stress
- STRESS AND CHANGES IN PHYSIOLOGY
- Stress reactivity
- MEASURING STRESS
- Laboratory setting
- Naturalistic setting
- Physiological measures
- Self-report measures
- FOCUS ON RESEARCH 10.1: PUTTING THEORY INTO PRACTICE
- Laboratory versus naturalistic measures
- Physiological versus self-report measures
- OF STRESS THE INTERACTION BETWEEN PSYCHOLOGICAL AND PHYSIOLOGICAL ASPECTS
- TO CONCLUDE
- QUESTIONS
- FOR DISCUSSION
- ASSUMPTIONS IN HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- FURTHER READING
- 11: Stress and illness
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- DOES STRESS CAUSE ILLNESS?
- How does stress cause illness?
- The chronic process
- The acute process
- STRESS AND CHANGES IN BEHAVIOUR
- Smoking
- Alcohol
- Eating
- Exercise
- Accidents
- Illness as a stressor
- STRESS AND CHANGES IN PHYSIOLOGY
- Stress and illness onset and progression
- Interaction between the behavioural and physiological pathways
- INDIVIDUAL VARIABILITY IN THE STRESS–ILLNESS LINK
- Stress reactivity
- Stress recovery
- Allostatic load
- Stress resistance
- PSYCHONEUROIMMUNOLOGY (PNI)
- The immune system
- Conditioning the immune system
- Measuring immune changes
- Psychological state and immunity
- Mood
- Beliefs
- Emotional expression
- Stress
- THE IMPACT OF CHRONIC STRESS
- Job stress
- Relationship stress
- WHICH FACTORS MODERATE THE STRESS–ILLNESS LINK?
- COPING
- What is coping?
- Ways of coping
- Measuring coping
- SOCIAL SUPPORT
- What is social support?
- Does social support affect health?
- How does social support influence health?
- FOCUS ON RESEARCH 11.1: TESTING A THEORY: SOCIAL SUPPORT AND HEALTH
- PERSONALITY
- Who is hostile?
- How does hostility link to stress?
- How does hostility link to illness?
- CONTROL
- What is control?
- Does control affect the stress response?
- Does control affect health?
- How does control mediate the stress–illness link?
- The possible benefits of low control
- CONTROL AND SOCIAL SUPPORT IN STRESS AND ILLNESS
- TO CONCLUDE
- QUESTIONS
- FOR DISCUSSION
- ASSUMPTIONS IN HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- FURTHER READING
- 12: Pain
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- WHAT IS PAIN?
- EARLY PAIN THEORIES – PAIN AS A SENSATION
- INCLUDING PSYCHOLOGY IN THEORIES OF PAIN
- THE GATE CONTROL THEORY OF PAIN
- Input to the gate
- Output from the gate
- How does the GCT differ from earlier models of pain?
- What opens the gate
- What closes the gate
- Problems with the GCT
- THE ROLE OF PSYCHOSOCIAL FACTORS IN PAIN PERCEPTION
- SUBJECTIVE-AFFECTIVE-COGNITIVE PROCESSES
- The role of learning
- The role of affect
- The role of cognition
- Behavioural processes
- The interaction between these different processes
- THE ROLE OF PSYCHOLOGY IN PAIN TREATMENT
- Cognitive behavioural therapy
- CHRONIC PAIN FOCUS ON RESEARCH 12.1: PUTTING THEORY INTO PRACTICE – TREATING
- Placebos and pain reduction
- ACCEPTANCE? THE OUTCOME OF PAIN TREATMENT AND MANAGEMENT – A ROLE FOR PAIN
- Cognitive behavioural therapy
- MEASURING PAIN
- Self-reports
- Observational assessment
- Physiological measures
- TO CONCLUDE
- QUESTIONS
- FOR DISCUSSION
- ASSUMPTIONS IN HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- FURTHER READING
- and health 13: Placebos and the interrelationship between beliefs, behaviour
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- WHAT IS A PLACEBO?
- A HISTORY OF INERT TREATMENTS
- Modern-day placebos
- Placebos – to be taken out of an understanding of health?
- HOW DO PLACEBOS WORK?
- Non-interactive theories
- Interactive theories
- Physiological theories
- THE CENTRAL ROLE OF PATIENT EXPECTATIONS
- PLACEBO FOCUS ON RESEARCH 13.1: TESTING A THEORY – ‘DOING AS YOU’RE TOLD’ AS A
- COGNITIVE DISSONANCE THEORY
- The effect of investment
- Justification and changes in symptoms
- Evidence for the role of justification
- An example of Totman’s theory
- Support for cognitive dissonance theory
- Problems with cognitive dissonance theory
- THE ROLE OF PLACEBO EFFECTS IN HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- Health beliefs
- Illness cognitions
- Health professionals’ health beliefs
- Health-related behaviours
- Stress
- Pain
- Implications for dualism
- TO CONCLUDE
- QUESTIONS
- FOR DISCUSSION
- ASSUMPTIONS IN HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- FURTHER READING
- illness (1) 14: HIV and cancer: psychology throughout the course of
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- HIV AND AIDS
- The history of HIV
- What is HIV?
- The progression from HIV to AIDS
- The prevalence of HIV and AIDS
- THE ROLE OF PSYCHOLOGY IN THE STUDY OF HIV
- Psychology and susceptibility to the HIV virus
- Psychology and progression from HIV to AIDS
- Psychology and longevity
- FUNCTIONING FOCUS ON RESEARCH 14.1: TESTING A THEORY – PSYCHOLOGY AND IMMUNE
- CANCER
- What is cancer?
- The prevalence of cancer
- The role of psychology in cancer
- The psychosocial factors in the initiation and promotion of cancer
- Psychological consequences of cancer
- Psychology and the alleviation of symptoms
- Psychological factors in longevity
- CANCER SYMPTOMS FOCUS ON RESEARCH 14.2: PUTTING THEORY INTO PRACTICE – TREATING
- TO CONCLUDE
- QUESTIONS
- FOR DISCUSSION
- ASSUMPTIONS IN HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- FURTHER READING
- the course of illness (2) 15: Obesity and coronary heart disease: psychology throughout
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- OBESITY
- The role of psychological factors in obesity
- WHAT IS OBESITY?
- HOW COMMON IS OBESITY?
- WHAT ARE THE PROBLEMS WITH OBESITY?
- Physical problems
- Psychological problems
- WHAT CAUSES OBESITY?
- Physiological theories
- Behavioural theories
- What does all this research mean?
- OBESITY TREATMENT
- Traditional treatment approaches
- Multidimensional behavioural programmes
- The role of dieting in treating obesity
- SHOULD OBESITY BE TREATED AT ALL?
- The benefits of treatment
- The treatment alternatives
- Drug treatments of obesity
- Surgical treatments of obesity
- CONCLUSION
- CORONARY HEART DISEASE (CHD)
- What is CHD?
- The prevalence of CHD
- Risk factors for CHD
- The role of psychology in CHD
- Beliefs about CHD
- The psychological impact of CHD
- FOCUS ON RESEARCH 15.1: TESTING A THEORY: THE CONSEQUENCES OF DISEASE
- Predicting and changing behavioural risk factors for CHD
- Psychology and rehabilitation of patients with CHD
- Conclusion
- TO CONCLUDE
- QUESTIONS
- FOR DISCUSSION
- ASSUMPTIONS IN HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- FURTHER READING
- of life 16 Measuring health status: from mortality rates to quality
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- MORTALITY RATES
- MORBIDITY RATES
- MEASURES OF FUNCTIONING
- SUBJECTIVE HEALTH STATUS
- WHAT IS QUALITY OF LIFE?
- Creating a conceptual framework
- How should it be measured?
- REPLACEMENT SURGERY FOCUS ON RESEARCH 16.1: PUTTING THEORY INTO PRACTICE – EVALUATING HIP
- A SHIFT IN PERSPECTIVE
- Value
- Subjectivity of the subject
- Subjectivity of the researcher
- Definition of health
- USING QUALITY OF LIFE IN RESEARCH
- Quality of life as an outcome measure
- Quality of life as a predictor of longevity
- TO CONCLUDE
- QUESTIONS
- FOR DISCUSSION
- ASSUMPTIONS IN HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- FURTHER READING
- 17 The assumptions of health psychology
- CHAPTER OVERVIEW
- THE ASSUMPTIONS OF HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
- The mind–body split
- Dividing up the soup
- The problem of progression
- The problem of methodology
- The problem of measurement
- Integrating the individual with their social context
- Data are collected in order to develop theories; these theories are not data
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