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Health Behavior

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'Personal attributes such as beliefs, expectations, motives, values, ... physiotherapy/rehab... also can. include prayer and visiting shrines. Key Definitions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Health Behavior


1
Health Behavior
  • November 15th, 2004
  • Kelly Doell

2
Your behavior?
  • Consider your last week or two list some of the
    health behavior in which you engaged.

3
  • Working Definition
  • Personal attributes such as beliefs,
    expectations, motives, values, perceptions, and
    other cognitive elements personality
    characteristics, including affective emotional
    states and traits and overt behavior patterns,
    actions and habits that relate to health
    maintenance, to health restoration and to health
    improvement (Gochman, 1988, p. 3)

4
Key Definitions
  • Health behavior broken down
  • A) Preventative
  • B) Protective
  • C) Illness
  • D) Sick-role
  • E) Societal
  • (Collated by Gochman, 1997)

5
Key Definitions
  • A. Preventative
  • Any medically recommended action, voluntarily
    taken by the person who believes themselves to be
    healthy, that tends to prevent disease or
    disability and/ or detect disease in an
    asymptomatic way
  • i. Primary reduction or elimination of risk
    factors
  • ii. Secondary asymptomatic detection of a
    disease in its early stages

6
  • Medical Prevention Examples
  • Immunization against
  • - diphtheria
  • - tetanus
  • - typhoid fever
  • - etc.
  • Consuming foods that contain A, C, and D vitamins
    to prevent pellagra, scurvy, and rickets
  • Non-medical Prevention Examples
  • Eating healthy
  • - eating breakfast
  • -eating regularly etc.
  • Weight management
  • Physical activity
  • Consumption of alcohol
  • Not smoking
  • Wearing seat belts
  • Obeying traffic laws
  • Safe sex activities
  • Safety regulations at work

7
  • Secondary Prevention (Physician-generated
    prevention)
  • Facilitate the early detection of a condition
    (and thus minimize its impact
  • E.g. physical exams to detect signs of cancer,
    heart disease, or dental conditions
  • Passive vs. Active
  • Societal public health activities vs. individual
    activities
  • E.g. Chlorination (societal and passive) vs.
    dental flossing (individual and active)

8
Key Definitions
  • B) Protective
  • Actions that people engage in to protect,
    promote, or maintain health, whether these
    actions are medically approved or not
  • E.g. praying, taking laxatives, cold showers, hot
    baths, taking mega-doses of vitamins, wearing
    copper bracelets, eating garlic, hitting yourself
    on the head with a baseball bat

9
Key Definitions
  • C) Illness behaviour
  • Actions by persons who are uncertain about
    whether they are well, who are troubled or
    puzzled by bodily sensations or feelings they
    believe are signs or symptoms of illness, who
    want to clarify the meaning of these experiences
    and thus determine whether they are well, and who
    want to know what to do if they are not
  • help seeking behavior, responses to bodily signs
  • E.g. seeking opinion from someone who is
    perceived to having expertise, seeing a
    naturopath, taking blood pressure at drug store,
    seeing a physician etc.

10
Key Definitions
  • D) Sick-role
  • Actions undertaken by people who have been
    designated as being sick, either by others or by
    themselves

E.g. returning for medical appointments, bed
rest, going to physiotherapy/rehab also can
include prayer and visiting shrines
11
Key Definitions
  • E) Societal health behavior
  • What society does for the collectivity
  • E.g. health education, food safety, licensing of
    professional providers, monitor the environment

12
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13
Risk Behavior
  • If your friends jumped off a bridge, would
    you jump off, too?
  • Moms everywhere
  • Only if I went last My risk assessed
    response
  • Risk behavior
  • Behavior that jeopardizes current or future
    health
  • Examples
  • Smoking, not wearing a seat belt, heavy drinking,
    driving fast, unprotected promiscuous sex

14
A few notes on lifestyle
  • Health lifestyles are collective patterns of
    health-related behavior based on choices from
    options available to people according to their
    life chances.
  • Bourdieu (1984) believed that although
    individuals choose their lifestyles, they do not
    do so with complete free will.
  • A part of lifestyle is formed by the habitus.

15
Notion of a Habitus
  • Social structures and conditions engender
    enduring personal orientations that are more or
    less routine, and when these orientations are
    acted upon, they tend to reproduce the structures
    from which they are derived.
  • (Gochman, 1997, p. 258)

16
  • Bordieu found class differences in lifestyle
    mostly surrounding sport and food preferences.
  • Bordieus lesson routines of individuals are
    influenced by structures of their social world
    and that the practice of these routines
    perpetuates the structures
  • Class culture
    Food habits
  • Bottom Line?
  • Strong influence of structure (i.e. life
    chances) on the habitus mind-set from which
    lifestyle choices are derived (Gochman, 1997).
    Lifestyles are systematic products of habitus and
    become socially qualified.

17
Discussion Questions
  • Who influences social structure the most?
  • How does this influence routines and health
    behavior?

18
References
  • Bourdieu, P. (1990) The logic of practice.
    Stanford, CA Stanford University Press.
  • Gochman, D. S. (1988). Health behavior Plural
    perspectives. In D. S. Gochman (Ed.), Health
    behavior Emerging perspectives. (pp. 3 17).
    New York Plenum Press
  • Gochman, D. S. (1997). Handbook of health
    behavior research. New York Plenum Press
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