Title: Introduction to Health Psychology
1Introduction to Health Psychology
- What is health psychology?
- What questions does it address?
2What is Health Psychology?
- Concerned with the ways in which we, as
individuals, behave and interact with others in
sickness and in health. - What are the physiological bases of emotion?
- How do they relate to health and illness?
- What is stress?
- Can certain behaviours predispose us to
particular illnesses? - Can educational interventions prevent illnesses?
3When How did Health Psychology begin?
- Conference in USA in 1978
- Creation of a section devoted to health
psychology in the American Psychological
Association (APA) in 1979 - British Psychological Association (BPA) only set
up a section in 1986, which was formerly
recognised in 1997. - Health is a state of complete physical, mental
and social well-being and not merely the absence
of disease and infirmity. WHO 1946. The holistic
nature of health was thus emphasized.
4Matarazzos 1980 definition
- Health psychology is the aggregate of the
specific educational, scientific and professional
contributions of the discipline of psychology to
the promotion and maintenance of health, the
prevention and treatment of illness, the
identification of aetiologic and diagnostic
correlates of health, illness and related
dysfunction and the analysis and improvement of
the health care system and health policy
formation. This definition has become widely
accepted.
5Historical and Cultural Origins
- Basic ideas and concepts have been around for a
long time - Relationship between mind and body
- Study of psychosomatic disorders owes much to
Freud. - Attempts to relate distinct personality types to
particular diseases with a causation hypothesis
have largely been abandoned in favour of a more
behavioural or biological approach, which seeks
to employ interventions derived from behavioural
medicine. - Changing patterns of illness and disease
6Changing Patterns of Illness Disease
- Contageous diseases and infections now contribute
minimally to illness and death in the Western
World. - Major breakthroughs in science have reduced
prevalence of smallpox, rubella, influenza and
polio. - Most deaths now caused by heart disease, cancer
and strokes. - These diseases, studies suggest, are a by-product
of life-style. - By 1970s health spending in Western countries was
getting out of control. Governments began to
explore disease prevention and health promotion.
7Major Causes of Death in (21st
- Those in which behavioural pathogens are the
single most important factor. These are personal
habits such as smoking, excessive drinking,
over-eating and not exercising which can
influence the onset and course of a disease. - Fighting diseases endemic in different parts of
the world can be affected by behaviour and
attitude e.g. malaria.
8The Biomedical Model
- Diseases come from outside the body and invade
it, causing internal physical changes or - Diseases originate in the body as internal,
involuntary physical changes. - Diseases are caused by chemical imbalances,
bacteria, viruses or genetic pre-disposition. - Individuals are not responsible for their
illnesses, which are from biological changes
beyond their control. People who are ill are
victims. - Treatment should consist of vaccination, surgery,
chemotherapy or radio therapy, all of which aim
to change the
9The Biomedical Model continued
- Physical state of the body.
- Responsibility for treatment lies with the
medical profession, - Health and illness are qualitatively different.
You are either healthy or ill there is no
continuum between them. - Mind and body function independently of each
other. The abstract mind relates to feelings and
thoughts and is incapable of influencing physical
matter. - Illness may have psychological consequences, but
not psychological causes.
10The Biopsychosocial Model
- In opposition to these ideas, Health Psychology
argues that human beings should be seen as
complex systems. Illness is often caused by a
combination of biological ( e.g. viruses) and
psychological (e.g. behaviour and beliefs) and
social (e.g. poor housing, unemployment) factors. - These assumptions reflect the biopsychosocial
model of health and illness, reflecting the
changes in the nature of illness, causes of death
and life expectancy of the (20th. - Health Psychologists are interested in normal
everyday behaviour and normal psychological
processes in relation to health and illness,
rather than in psychopathology or abnormal
behaviour.
11(20th Changes in the nature of Illness
- The biopsychosocial model reflects fundamental
changes in the nature of illness, causes of death
and overall life expectancy during the (20th. - Average life expectancy in the the USA has
increased from 48 in 1900 to 76 today. There is
the same rate of increase for most Western,
industrialised nations. This is due mainly to the
virtual elimination of infectious diseases such
as pneumonia, flu, TB, diptheria, scarlet
fever, measles, typhoid and polio as causes of
death.
12Major Killers of the (20th and (21st
- HIV/AIDS increased the number of
infection-related deaths in the West in the 1980s
and 1990s. It is a major killer in Africa,
reducing life expectancy to the 30s in some
nations. - Poverty and poor nutrition has reduced life
expectancy in Burma, for example, to 48. - Todays major killers are cardiovascular
diseases-heart disease and strokes and cancers. - Cardiovascular diseases account for about 40 of
all deaths in industrialised countries.
13Why the Biomedical Model is no longer adequate
- There has been a small, but steady decline in
deaths due to cardiovascular diseases since the
1960s. This is due to - Improvement in medical treatment.
- Changes in lifestyle reduction in cholesterol
levels and cigarette smoking. - Rise in cancers in industrialised nations due
almost entirely to rises in lung cancer,
14Why the Biomedical Model no longer applies
- The influence of lifestyle factors is
incompatible with the biomedical model. (Stroebe
2000). - Conceptualisation of disease in purely biological
terms means that the model has little to offer
the prevention of chronic diseases through
efforts to change peoples health beliefs,
attitudes and behaviour. - The biomedical model has a reactive attitude
towards illness. Traditional medicine is more
focused on disease than on health.
15The Biopsychosocial Model
- It would be more appropriate to call our
healthcare systems disease care systems, as the
primary aim is to treat or cure people, rather
than promote health or prevent diseases. Maes
Van Elderen 1998. - The biopsychosocial model underlying health
psychology adopts a more proactive attitude
towards health. - Bio genetic, viruses, bacterial, lesions,
structural defects, gender - Psycho cognitions (e.g. expectations of health),
emotions (e.g. fear of treatment), behaviour (e.g
smoking, exercise, diet, alcohol consumption,
stress, pain.
16The Social aspect of the Biopsychosocial Model
- Social Norms of behaviour e.g. smoking/not
smoking. - Pressures to change e.g. peer pressure,
expectations, parental pressures. - Social values placed on health.Social class
- Ethnicity
- Employment
- Gender expectations
- The Biopsychosocial model offers a holistic
approach. The person as a whole has to be looked
after. Both at micro-level e.g.causes, such as
chemical imbalance and at macro-level, such as
the extent of social support need to be taken
into account. These processes interact to
determine someones health status.
17Key Beliefs that inform the Biopsychosocial Model
- Individuals are not just passive victims, but are
responsible for taking their medication and
changing their beliefs and behaviour. - Health and illness exist on a continuum-people
are not either healthy or ill, but progress along
a continuum in both directions. - Psychological factors contribute to the aetiology
(causes) of illness. They are not just
consequences of illness. - According to Ogden (2002) health psychology aims
to - Evaluate the role of behaviour in the aetiology
of illness, such as the links between smoking,
coronary heart disease, cholesterol level, high
blood pressure. - Predict unhealthy behaviours- for example,
smoking, alcohol consumption and high fat diets
are related to beliefs and belief about health
and illness can be used can be used to predict
behaviour.
18Role of Health Psychology cont.
- Understand the role of psychological factors in
the experience of illness. For example,
understanding the psychological consequences of
illness could help alleviate pain, nausea,
vomiting ,anxiety and depression. - Evaluate the role of psychological factors in the
treatment of illness. - These aims are put into practice by
- Promoting health behaviour, such as changing
beliefs and behaviour - Preventing illness, for example by training
health professionals to improve communication
skills and to carry out interventions that may
prevent illness. - Why do people adopt, or fail to adopt
health-related behaviour? - Models of health behaviour try to answer this
question.
19Culture Health
- One of the macro-level processes.
- 1) How cultural factors influence various aspects
of health. Stemming from an earlier, more
established study. - 2) The more recent and active study of the health
of individuals and groups as they settle into and
adapt to new cultural circumstances through
migration and their persistence over generations
as ethnic groups. - Health Disease as Cultural Concepts
- Concepts of health and disease are are defined
differently across cultures. - Disease is rooted in pathological, biological
processes common to all. - Illness now widely recognised as a culturally
influenced, subjective experience of suffering
and discomfort.
20Culture Health
- Recognising certain conditions as either healthy
or a disease is also linked to culture e.g.
trances are health-seeking mechanisms in some
cultures. In others it is seen as a psychiatric
disorder. - How a condition is expressed is also linked to
cultural norms. In some cultures, psychological
problems are expressed somatically- in the form
of bodily symptoms e.g. in Chinese culture. - Disease and disability are highly variable.
Cultural factors such as diet, substance abuse
and social relationships within the family also
contribute to the prevalence of disease,
including heart disease, cancer and schizophrenia.
21Acculturation
- The process of adaptation to a new host culture
is called acculturation. - Cross-cultural psychologists believe that there
is complex pattern of continuity and change in
how people who have developed in one cultural
context adapt when they move to and live in a new
cultural context. - The longer immigrants live in the host country
(increasing acculturation) their health status
migrates to the national norm of that country. - For immigrants to Canada from 26 out of 29
countries, their coronary heart disease rates
shifted to the Canadian norm. Similar patterns
have been found for stomach and intestinal cancer
among immigrants to the USA. - One possible explanation is exposure to widely
shared risk factors in the physical environment,
such as climate, pollution, pathogens.
22Pursuit of Assimilation or Integration
- Pursuing assimilation or integration as a way to
acculturation may expose immigrants to cultural
risk factors, such as diet, lifestyle and
substance abuse.. - This behavioural shift interpretation would be
supported if health status both improved and
declined relative to national norms. - Main evidence points to a decline. This supports
the acculturation stress interpretation that
the very stress of acculturation may involve risk
factors that can reduce health status. - This is supported by evidence that stress can
reduce resistance to diseases such as
hypertension and diabetes. Berry 1998.