Title: COPING WITH STRESS
1COPING WITH STRESS
- The term coping strategy refers to the process
of resolving stressful situations and of finding
ways of feeling less stressed. - PROBLEM FOCUSSED COPING involves engaging in
purposeful action to improve the situation - EMOTION FOCUSSED COPING
- involves efforts to reduce the negative
emotions of stress
2COPING
- This refers to the behavioural and psychological
efforts used to - reduce, master or tolerate stress
- FOLKMAN defined it as
- thoughts and behaviours used to manage the
internal and external demands of stressful
situations
3SKINNERS FAMILIES OF COPING
- POSITIVE STRATEGIES NEGATIVSTRATEGIES
- Problem solving 1. Escape, avoidance
- Support seeking 2. Rumination
- Distraction 3. Helplessness
- Emotional regulation 4. Social withdrawal
- Positive cognitive
- restructuring
4LAZARUS AND FOLKMAN
- Distinguished between
- PROBLEM focussed strategies,
- where a person tackles the problem
- itself (external)
- and
- EMOTION focussed strategies, where a person
concentrates on reducing the stress response
(internal)
5PROBLEM FOCUSSED COPING
- This refers to practical efforts to actively
confront the stressor and reduce its impact. It
might involve - systematic planning,
- e.g. revision timetable
- before an exam
- Using your social network
- for informational and
- practical support
-
6EMOTION FOCUSSED COPING
- This refers to thoughts or actions which relieve
the impact of stress. - It can involve
- Denial, such as refusing to believe the severity
of ones illness - Distraction, such as watching a
- film when we are feeling upset
- Becoming angry and seeking
- the opinion of friends and family
7THE MAIN EFFECTS HYPOTHESIS
- This proposes that problem focussed strategies
will reduce the main effects of the stressor IF
they are controllable
8THE GOODNESS OF FIT HYPOTHESIS
- It is preferable to use problem focussed coping
when the stressor is perceived as controllable,
e.g. homework, exams, applying for UCAS, and - emotion focussed coping when the stressor is not
controllable e.g. illness, relationships,
bereavement
9RESEARCH EVIDENCE AND COPING STRATEGIES
- Folkman found that planned problem focussed
strategies led to satisfactory outcomes more than
emotion focussed ones - Wu found that doctors who
- accepted responsibility
- for their mistakes made
- constructive changes but
- experienced more distress.
10EVIDENCE FOR MAIN EFFECTS HYPOTHESIS
- Penley et al found that problem focussed coping
(which deals with the main effects) correlated
positively with physically and psychologically
healthy outcomes - Emotion focussed coping (avoidance, wishful
thinking) correlated negatively
11EVIDENCE FOR THE GOODNESS-OF-FIT HYPOTHESIS
- Zakowski found that Ps used problem solving when
stressor was controllable and emotion-focussed
when it was not. - Also, emotion focussed coping was more effective
with an uncontrollable stressor - So it is best to alter the strategy depending on
the stressor (goodness of fit)
12HYPOTHESIS 1
- Hardy people will have a lower stress response
when faced with a problem than non-hardy people - DESIGN independent measures (one group of people
who score high on hardiness and one group who
score low) - IV hardy score
- DV time taken to solve arithmetic problem under
stress before giving up - Variables to control for mathematical ability,
age, gender, time of day, noise
13HYPOTHESIS 1 contd
- 20 year 9 grammar school students taken from a
target population of able 14-15 year olds in
Bucks - Procedure assess maths ability by asking their
maths teacher. Eliminate top and bottom
students. Give each student some mental
arithmetic to do verbally. Speed up as you go
along. Time how long they answer before they
give up - Findings and conclusions Compare the results of
the hardy vs the non hardy Ps. If the hardy Ps
last significantly longer at the task, we can
conclude that - Hardiness alters a persons ability to respond in
a problem focussed situation
14HYPOTHESIS 2
- Now do something similar for hypothesis 2, which
is testing the STRATEGY rather than the type of
person!
15STRESS MANAGEMENT
- PHYSICAL METHODS
- These include 1. Biofeedback
- 2. Anti-anxiety drugs
- 3. Physical exercise
- PSYCHOLOGICAL METHODS
- 1. Cognitive behaviour therapy,
- e.g. stress
inoculation - 2. Social support
-
16BIOFEEDBACK
17BIOFEEDBACK
- This transforms aspects of our physiology, e.g.
heart beat, into signals.(see p.144/172) - A person is attached to a machine which transmits
an auditory or visual signal to indicate heart
rate.
18BIOFEEDBACK
- The person has been trained in relaxation
technique, e.g. breathing - The key feature of biofeedback - muscles under
involuntary control of the ANS are brought under
voluntary control
19THE 3 STAGES
- DEVELOP AWARENESS of a physiological body
response, e.g. breathing, heart rate - LEARN RELAXATION TECHNIQUE how to quieten the
body Indian yogis are good at this, as are
Buddhist monks - TRANSFER THE CONTROL to everyday life situation
20SCOLIOSIS IN TEENAGERS
- Dworkin attached teenagers
- with curvature of the spine to
- a biofeedback machine.
- They learnt how to control
- their spinal muscles and
- improve their posture
21HEADACHES
- TENSION HEADACHES have been reduced by
biofeedback, and has also been successful with
asthma and high blood pressure.
22EVALUATION OF BIOFEEDBACK 2
- Biofeedback may work because it gives the person
a sense of control, rather than the biofeedback
itself working - More successful with children
- than adults
- See case study p.174 new book
23ANTI-ANXIETY DRUGS
- When the body is under stress, it produces
hormones which create anxiety. Drugs which
control these mechanisms are - BETA BLOCKERS (or barbiturates) which block the
activity of the sympathetic nervous system - BENZODIAZAPINES which control the release of
neurotransmitters (serotonin) at the synapse and
reduce anxiety - BUSPIRONE, a more modern drug which regulates
serotonin
24BENZODIAZAPINES
- Valium and librium are examples. They increase
the activity of a neurotransmitter - GABA serotonin
reduces - activity
arousal
25PROBLEMS WITH BENZODIAZAPINES
- They have unwanted side effects
- Make you drowsy
- Can cause cognitive and auditory impairment
- Can lead to depression
- Interact unpredictably with alcohol
- You can become dependent on them
- People become more accident prone
26BUSPIRONE
- This is a more recent drug with fewer side
effects. It facilitates the action of serotonin
and does not cause drowsiness
27BUSPIRONE
28BETA BLOCKERS
- These decrease heart rate and lower blood
pressure. They therefore reduce the risk of
heart disease in stressed individuals - TAYLOR found them
- effective for public
- speakers and musicians.
- They are not addictive,
- but their effect is only temporary
29EVALUATION OF ANTI-ANXIETY DRUGS
- Reduce intense feelings of stress ()
- They dont address the problem (-)
- Can have side effects (-)
- Benzodiazepines can only be used for up to 4
weeks (-) - It can take years to come off benzodiazepines(-)
30PSYCHOLOGICAL METHODS OF COPING WITH STRESS
- STRESS INOCULATION
- HARDINESS TRAINING
- SOCIAL SUPPORT
31COGNITIVE THERAPIES
- These aim to replace negative, irrational
thoughts with - positive, rational ones
- Maladaptive cognitions
- are restructured into
- adaptive ones.
- This in itself can
- sometimes eliminate stress
32STRESS INOCULATION
- Meichenbaum argued
- that if you prepare a
- person to cope with
- stress, they will be
- ready when it arrives
333 STAGES OF TRAINING
- ASSESSMENT therapist discusses the nature of
the problem with the client - STRESS REDUCTION TECHNIQUE client learns ways
to cope with stress, e.g. relaxation, coping
self-statements, - APPLICATION AND FOLLOW-THROUGH client learns to
use these techniques in difficult situations, and
practices with the use of role play
34RESEARCH SUPPORT
- MEICHENBAUM compared stress inoculation with
desensitisation. (Patients gradually lose their
fear by working through a hierarchy of fearful
situations with therapist) - He treated patients who had 2 phobias rat and
snake. He only treated one phobia. - 1 group received desensitisation, the other
stress inoculation - They both improved the phobia, but stress
inoculation had also helped the non-treated
phobia
35EVALUATION OF STRESS INOCULATION
- It is fairly effective for
- moderate levels of stress
- It is not as successful for
- high levels of stress
- Individuals respond
- differently
- to making coping self
- statements
- See p.150/177
36HARDINESS TRAINING
- Kobasa aimed to increase hardiness in stressed
individuals. This involves - FOCUSSING on the physical signs of stress and
become aware when they are starting - RECONSTRUCTING STRESS SITUATIONS think about
recent stress situations and evaluate how it
could have turned out better - COMPENSATING THROUGH SELF IMPROVEMENT if a
stressor cannot be changed, learn to accept and
master it
37HARDINESS
- It works better in conjunction with social support
38EVALUATION OF HARDI-TRAINING
- SARAFINO reported that people who had undergone
this training scored higher on hardiness tests
and had lowered blood pressure - FISCHMAN found it increased job satisfaction and
reduced headaches in executives
39SOCIAL SUPPORT
- This provides protection against stress
- Keicolt-Glaser found that students who had more
social support suffered less reduction in their
immune system before exams
40SOCIAL SUPPORT
412 MEANINGS OF SOCIAL SUPPORT
- SOCIAL NETWORK Number of people available to
provide it. It is unrelated to wellbeing. - PERCEIVED SUPPORT the strength of useful support
given by individuals. This is positively related
to wellbeing
42STUDIES OF SOCIAL NETWORKS
- BROWN AND HARRIS found that 61 of severely
depressed women had experienced a very stressful
life event in the previous 9 months, compared
with 25 of non-depressed women. - Women who had had a serious life event
- 37 without a friend depressed
- 10 with a friend depressed
43PREGNANT WOMEN
- These were found to
- have more medical
- complications if they
- had low
- psychosocial assets.
- E.g. social support
-
44MARRIAGE AND DIVORCE
- Selye et al found that divorced, widowed and
separated adults had higher rates of cancer than
married adults (but cause and effect cannot be
established)
45INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES
- People have different coping strategies.
- TASK ORIENTED dealing with the situation
itself, e.g. doing some revision, planning a
revision timetable, extra lessons - EMOTION ORIENTED getting some counselling,
talking about it - AVOIDANCE ORIENTED minimise the situation,
decide exams are not important
46EFFECTIVENESS OF STRATEGY
- Highly anxious people are more likely to use
emotion- and avoidance strategies - Type As use task oriented strategies
- Task oriented strategies are effective when the
person has the resources to change the situation - Emotion oriented strategies are effective when
the situation cannot be changed - Individual differences are important, but so is
the situation