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Stress, Coping, and Health

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For each statement, decide whether the statement is uncharacteristic or ... 16. I always seem to end up shopping for birthday or Christmas gifts at the last minute. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Stress, Coping, and Health


1
Stress, Coping, and Health
  • Chapter 7

2
Procrastination Scale (Lay, 1986) - For student
populations
  • Instructions
  • People may use the following statements to
    describe themselves. For each statement, decide
    whether the statement is uncharacteristic or
    characteristic of you using the following 5 point
    scale. Note that the 3 on the scale is Neutral
    the statement is neither characteristic nor
    uncharacteristic of you. In the box to the right
    of each statement, fill in the number on the 5
    point scale that best describes you.

3
  • 1. I often find myself performing tasks that I
    had intended to do days before.

4
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

5
  • 2. I do not do assignments until just before
    they are to be handed in.

6
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

7
  • 3. When I am finished with a library book, I
    return it right away regardless of the date it is
    due.

8
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

9
  • 4. When it is time to get up in the morning, I
    most often get right out of bed.

10
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

11
  • 5. A letter may sit for days after I write it
    before mailing it.

12
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

13
  • 6. I generally return phone calls promptly.

14
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

15
  • 7. Even with jobs that require little else
    except sitting down and doing them, I find they
    seldom get done for days.

16
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

17
  • 8. I usually make decisions as soon as possible.

18
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

19
  • 9. I generally delay before starting on work I
    have to do.

20
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

21
  • 10. I usually have to rush to complete a task
    on time.

22
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

23
  • 11. When preparing to go out, I am seldom caught
    having to do something at the last minute.

24
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

25
  • 12. In preparing for some deadline, I often
    waste time by doing other things.

26
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

27
  • 13. I prefer to leave early for an appointment.

28
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

29
  • 14. I usually start an assignment shortly after
    it is assigned.

30
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

31
  • 15. I often have a task finished sooner than
    necessary.

32
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

33
  • 16. I always seem to end up shopping for
    birthday or Christmas gifts at the last minute.

34
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

35
  • 17. I usually buy even an essential item at the
    last minute.

36
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

37
  • 18. I usually accomplish all the things I plan
    to do in a day.

38
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

39
  • I am continually saying Ill do it tomorrow.

40
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

41
  • 20. I usually take care of all the tasks I have
    to do before I settle down and relax for the
    evening.

42
Enter your response.
0
  • Strongly Agree
  • Agree
  • Neutral
  • Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree

43
I. Relationship between Life Events and Stress
0
  • A. Demands, Strain, Coping, and Stress
  • Demands are environmental requirements that
    motivate behavior.
  • Strain occurs when resources are inadequate to
    meet demands.
  • Coping is behavior to meet demands.
  • Stress or distress is a case of excessive strain
    coping is inadequate.
  • Excessive demands
  • Limited resources

44
I. Relationship between Life Events and Stress
0
  • B. Characteristics of Stress
  • 1. Physical Symptoms of Stress
  • Allergies, colds, flu, headache.
  • 2. Psychological Symptoms of Stress
  • Anxiety, boredom, depression, feel helpless,
    negative mood.
  • 3. Behavioral Symptoms of Stress
  • Consume alcohol, nicotine, drugs, eat comfort
    foods, waste time.

45
I. Relationship between Life Events and Stress
0
  • C. Characteristics of Stressors
  • 1. Negative Life Events as Stressors
  • Same domain effect negative life demands produce
    distress or stress positive life demands produce
    eustress.
  • 2. Magnitude of Life Events
  • Cataclysmic events are high magnitude stressors.
    Daily hassles are low magnitude stressors. Daily
    uplifts bring relief, joy, amusement.

46
I. Relationship between Life Events and Stress
0
  • C. Characteristics of Stressors
  • 3. Predictability and Controllability of Life
    Events
  • Predictable stressors are preferred over
    unpredictable stressors.
  • Preparatory response hypothesis predictive
    stimulus allows for preparation of shock.
  • Safety hypothesis person can relax and feel safe
    during signaled-shock free intervals.

47
I. Relationship between Life Events and Stress
0
  • D. Stressor-Stress Relationship
  • Generally stress increases with increases in
    stressors magnitude.
  • 1. Retrospective versus Prospective Research
  • Retrospective stressed individual tries to
    recall past stressors.
  • Prospective measure person's stress level before
    and after onset of suspected stressor.
  • 2. Determining the Impact of Stressors
  • Life change unit measure of amount of adjustment
    a demand requires
  • Undergraduate Stress Questionnaire provide life
    change units for demands faced by university
    students.

48
I. Relationship between Life Events and Stress
0
  • D. Stressor-Stress Relationship
  • 3. Stressor Magnitude and Stress
  • Acute stress disorder fear and helplessness
    reaction to a traumatic event that threatens
    death or serious injury subsides in four weeks.
  • Posttraumatic stress disorder acute stress
    disorder lasts more than four weeks. Person
    experiences distressing recollections,
    physiological reactivity, social impairment, and
    avoids stimulus reminders.
  • Terrorist attack of 11 September 2001 produced
    PTSD.
  • 4. Cumulative Effects of Stressors
  • As life demands accumulate they become stressors
    and produce stress.
  • 5. Racism as a Stressor
  • Racism experienced by African Americans and other
    minorities is associated with stress and
    psychiatric symptoms.

49
II. Bodily Effects of Stress
0
  • A. Physiological Effects of Stressors
  • 1. General Adaptation Syndrome (Selye, 1976)
  • The body's physiological reaction to all
    stressors occurs in three stages
  • alarm, resistance, and exhaustion (adaptation
    energy depleted).
  • death
  • 2. Psychological Stressors and Physiological
    Responses
  • Such stressors as public speaking and job
    interviews can cause stress.
  • B. Stressors and Psychophysiologic Disorders
  • Stressors, e.g., anger can interact with chronic
    risk factors (cholesterol, high blood pressure)
    to increase the likelihood of heart attacks.

50
II. Bodily Effects of Stress
0
  • C. Stressors and the Immune System
  • Psychoneuroimmunology study relationship between
    psychological stressors, strength of the immune
    system, and disease.
  • Immune system is body's line of defense against
    bacteria and viruses.
  • 1. Stressor Effects on the Immune System
  • Stressors reduce effectiveness of immune system
    and disease occurs.
  • 2. Open Window Hypothesis
  • Few hours after strenuous exercise the immune
    system is weak, which provides an open window for
    germs to invade and infect the body.

51
II. Bodily Effects of Stress
0
  • C. Stressors and the Immune System
  • 3. Stressors, Immune System, and the Common Cold
  • Psychological stressors can downgrade the immune
    system and increase the likelihood that a cold
    virus will result in a cold.
  • 4. Multiple Stressor Effects
  • Stressors simultaneously affect a person's
    psychological, physiological, and immune systems.

52
III. Variables Moderating the Impact of Life
Events
0
  • A. Appraisal of Life Events
  • Moderating variables environment or person
    characteristics that alter the relationship
    between the stressor and stress.
  • 1. Appraisal and Stress
  • Primary appraisal is event relevant, benign,
    positive, or stressful?
  • Secondary appraisal inventory resources for
    coping with stressor.
  • 2. Appraisal as a Moderator
  • With trauma orientation appraisal a gruesome
    event was stressful with denial or
    intellectualization appraisal, it was less
    stressful.

53
III. Variables Moderating the Impact of Life
Events
0
  • B. Coping and Behavior
  • 1. Coping
  • Problem focused coping identify problem clearly
    and consider potential solutions.
  • Emotion focused coping managing the distress the
    person feels.
  • Appraisal and subsequent coping is a process, not
    static event.
  • 2. Health Behaviors
  • Health enhancing behaviors help prevent stress or
    reduce its impact.
  • Health impairing behavior increase the likelihood
    and severity of stress such behaviors as
    alcohol, drugs, and tobacco use.
  • C. Social Support as a Moderator
  • Buffering hypothesis social support buffers or
    protects a person from harm of a potential
    stressor. Social support also buffers immune
    system and physical health against stressors.

54
III. Variables Moderating the Impact of Life
Events
0
  • D. Personality Differences as Moderator Variables
  • 1. Procrastination
  • Procrastinating students experience more stress
    at semester's end than do non-procrastinating
    students.
  • 2. Sense of Humor
  • With this sense, a person is inclined to smile,
    laugh, and be amused. It can help with
    stressor-appraisal and reduce the impact of
    stress.
  • 3. Hardiness
  • With this personality trait, a person sees life
    events as challenging, feels in control, and is
    committed to various activities.
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