Introduction to Health Psychology - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 42
About This Presentation
Title:

Introduction to Health Psychology

Description:

Introduction to Health Psychology Can anyone give some examples of what we mean by social factors? What are examples of social factors that might influence illness ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:114
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 43
Provided by: homepageN8
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Introduction to Health Psychology


1
Introduction to Health Psychology
2
Health Psychology
  • Study of social, behavioural, cognitive, and
    emotional factors that influence the
  • Maintenance of health
  • Development of illness and disease
  • Course of illness or disease
  • Patients and familys response to illness and
    disease

3
What is health, illness, and disease?
4
World Health Definition of Health (1948)
  • A complete state of physical, mental, and social
    well-being and not merely the absence of disease
    and infirmity.

5
Health Concept
6
SF-36 (John Ware et al., 1993) Social
Functioning
  • in past 4 weeks, to what extent have
    physical/emotional problems interfered with
    normal social activities with family, friends,
    neighbors, or groups.
  • in past 4 weeks, how much time has your
    physical/emotional problems interfered with your
    social activities (like visiting with friends and
    relatives)?

7
SF-36 (John Ware et al., 1993)
  • Role limitations due to physical health Do you
    have any of the following problems with work or
    other regular daily activity as a result of your
    physical health?
  • Cut down on time spent on work
  • Accomplished less than you would like
  • Limited in the kind of work you could do
  • Had difficulty performing work(took more effort)

8
SF-36 (John Ware et al., 1993)
  • Role limitation due to emotional problem Do you
    have any of the following problems with work or
    other regular daily activity as a result of any
    emotional problems?
  • Cut down on time spent at work
  • Accomplished les than you would like
  • Didnt do work or other activities as carefully
    as usual.

9
What are your health risks?For each item, answer
YES or No.
10
What are your health risks?For each item, answer
YES or No.
11
Estimated contributions of different factors to
health status.
12
Health Psychologist
  • Scientists who research the area
  • Health promotion intervene at the social (e.g.,
    government policy, community) or individual level
    to promote health and prevent illness and
    disease.
  • Clinical health psychologist intervene at the
    individual level to treat illness, slow or
    prevent disease progression, and reduce
    disability.

13
Health Psychology
  • Development or progression of illness and disease
  • Etiology
  • Individuals and familys response to illness and
    disease
  • Outcomes

14
Relation of health psychology to other
health-related fields
Medicine Psychosomatic Cardiology Oncology, etc.
Health Education Nutrition
Sociology Nutrition Exercise Phys.
Physiology
Psychology
15
History of Medicine
16
History of Medicine
2. Ancient Greeks
Body Mind
4. Contemporary View
3. Middle-Ages
Body Mind
Socio-behavioural
17
Supernatural or Magical BeliefDisease resulted
from
  • Sorcery
  • Breach of social taboo
  • Object intrusion
  • Supernatural possession
  • Losing ones sole

18
Treatments
  • Confession and appeasing of the gods.
  • Magical sucking to remove the intrusive object.
  • Drive out evil spirits by using vile concoctions
    such as animal excrement or even torture.
  • Trephination

19
Greeks Hippocrates (460-377 B.C.)
  • Origin of the view that disease is a natural
    process.
  • Humoral theory
  • View that disease occurs when the four fluids of
    the body are out of balance
  • Four fluids are blood, black bile, yellow bile,
    and phlegm.
  • Personality types

20
Hippocrates - Treatments
21
Evolving view of diseases
  • Anatomical pathology
  • Belief that disease was localized in anatomy
    (16th to 18th Centuries)
  • Tissue pathology
  • Specific tissues could become diseased while
    others remain healthy (Late 1800s)
  • Cellular pathology
  • Belief that life resided in cells and so cells
    must be the place to look for disease (19th
    century)

22
Evolving view of diseases
  • Germ theory
  • Discovery that particles in the air that could
    not seen (e.g., bacteria) could cause disease.
  • Magic bullet
  • A specific cure could be found for every ailment
    that restore the person to perfect health.
  • Biopsychosocial model
  • Mind, body, and environment interact in causing
    disease.

23
History of Medicine
Ancient Greeks
Body Mind
Contemporary View
Middle-Ages
Body Mind
Socio-behavioural
24
Psychosomatic Medicine
  • Freud (1856-1939)
  • Cannon (1932)
  • Dunbar (1930)
  • Alexander (1940s 1950s)

25
Biopsychosocial Model of Disease
  • Biology
  • Genetic variability
  • Anatomy
  • Physiology
  • Pathogens
  • Germs
  • Toxins
  • Social
  • Family
  • Society
  • Friends, etc.

26
Biopsychosocial Model
  • Psychological component
  • Behaviour (adoption and maintenance)
  • Emotional (feelings)
  • Cognition (thoughts, beliefs, and attitudes)
  • Personality characteristic ways of thinking and
    feeling

27
Important Contributions of Psychology to Health
  • Has provided techniques useful in changing
    behaviours that affect health and illness.
  • Is committed to keeping people healthy rather
    than waiting to only treat them when they become
    ill.
  • Long history of developing reliable and valid
    measures for assessing health-related factors.
  • Has contributed a solid foundation of scientific
    methods for studying such behaviours.

28
Please respond to each of these items with YES or
NO.
29
Please respond to each of these items with YES or
NO.
30
Please respond to each of these items with YES or
NO.
31
Research Methods Case Studies
  • In depth analysis of one individual
  • Type of single-subject research design
  • Advantage is a more complete analysis of the
    individual
  • Disadvantage is that it can magnify sampling
    errors

32
Correlational Studies
  • Yield degree of relationship between two
    variables
  • Type of descriptive research design
  • Advantage is that it can examine variables that
    cannot be experimentally manipulated (e.g., IQ
    and occupational status).
  • Disadvantage is that it cannot determine
    causality.

33
Cross-Sectional Study Designs
  • Compares groups at one point in time (e.g., age
    groups, ethnic groups, disease groups)
  • Advantage is that it is an efficient way to
    identify possible group differences because you
    can study them at one point in time.
  • Disadvantage is that you cannot rule out cohort
    effects.

34
Personality and Hypertension,The effect of
Hypertension Awareness (Irvine et al. 1989)
35
Personality and Hypertension Effect of
Hypertension Awareness
36
Personality and Hypertension Effect of
Hypertension Awareness
Group 1 gt Group 2 Group 3 (p lt 0.01)
37
Personality and HypertensionEffect of
Hypertension Awareness
Aware hypertensive gt normotensive unaware
hypertensive, P lt 0.001
38
Personality and HypertensionConclusion
  • Do hypertensives have a different personality
    than those with normal blood pressure?
  • No, because the unaware hypertensives did not
    differ from the normotensives.
  • Why did the aware and unaware hypertensives
    differ?
  • Possible explanations?

39
Personality and HypertensionConclusion
  • Awareness of hypertension status confounds
    assessment of the association between personality
    characteristics and hypertension.
  • Due to hypertension labeling effect or
  • Due to self-selection bias

40
Longitudinal Design
  • To gather data on the course of health or disease
    over time (e.g., progression of multiple
    sclerosis).
  • Advantage is that you can see the time course of
    the disease or behaviour (e.g., smoking cessation
    over time).
  • Disadvantage is it is costly and still subject to
    bias

41
Experimental Designs
  • Examines differences between experimentally
    manipulated groups (e.g., one group gets a
    certain drug and the other gets a placebo).
  • Advantage is that you can determine causality.
  • Disadvantage is cost and many variables cannot be
    experimentally manipulated (e.g., smoke exposure
    over time).

42
Please answer anonymously these questions
  • What is the main thing you learned from this
    lecture?
  • What is the main question you have that wasnt
    answered?
  • The things the instructor did best OR the best
    things about the lecture that were?
  • The things the instructor did worst OR the worst
    things about the lecture that were?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com