Title: The Role of Coping in the SESHealth Relationship
1The Role of Coping in the SES-Health Relationship
- Amy Teper
- February 27, 2008
2Coping Definitions
- behaviour that protects people from being
psychologically harmed by problematic social
experience (Perlin Schooler, 1978) - the person's constantly changing cognitive and
behavioral efforts to manage specific external
and/or internal demands that are appraised as
taxing or exceeding the person's resources
(Folkman et al, 1986) - Similar terminology mastery, adaptation, defense
- What should be encompassed in the definition of
coping? What should be excluded?
3Historical Perspectives
- Research on defense in 19th century
- Freud initially used concepts of defense and
repression interchangeably as his foundation for
psychoanalysis later recognized repression as a
type of defense - Anna Freud introduced a categorization of
defenses (e.g., regression) the idea that each
individual may have a limited repertoire of
defenses the idea that different
psychopathologies might be related to specific
defense styles (did not stand up to future
testing) the potential for some defenses to be
more pathological than others (adaptive and
non-adaptive defenses and hierarchical views on
defenses more mature defenses better mental
health) - Coping term first introduced into the
literature in late 1960s (Zeidner and Endler,
2008) - What is the benefit of coping vs. defense
terminology?
4Coping Theories Dispositional Approaches
- Derived from Freudian theories (also known as the
ego-psychoanalytic model) - Ego consists of
- unconscious cognitive
- mechanisms
- Stipulates that people
- generally have fixed
- approaches to coping
- over time, space and
- situation
5Contextual ApproachesStress and Coping Theory
(Folkman et al, 1986)
- Stress
- ?
- Cognitive Appraisal evaluates whether
particular event is relevantto a persons
well-being - Primary appraisal evaluation of potential harm
to self or family - Secondary appraisal evaluation if any way to
avoid harm or increase benefit (coping mechanisms
evaluated) - Primary and secondary appraisals converge to
determine if the event is deemed attention-worthy - ?
- Coping thoughts and actions taken throughout
the development of the stressful situation based
on the above contextual evaluation - ?
- Long-term outcome
- NOTE potential for non-linearity of the model
6Integrated Approaches
- Contemporary theorists suggest the importance of
both dispositional and contextual models - They suggest that broadly applicable, preferred
coping mechanisms may transcend particular - situational influences (coping styles)
- (Zeidner and Endler)
- Are these models useful?
7Coping Strategy Classifications
- the specific efforts, both behavioral and
psychological, that people employ to master,
tolerate, reduce, or minimize stressful events.
(MacArthur, 1998) - Lazarus Folkman,1980
- Problem-solving strategies that target the
stressor itself - Examples planning suppression of competing
activities - Emotion-focused strategies deal with the
emotional distress resulting from the stressor - Examples denial acceptance seeking emotional
social support - Problem-solving strategies tend to prevail when
people feel that something productive can be done - Most strategies combine problem-solving and
emotion-focused to a certain extent - Bigger problems more likely to evoke greater
number of responses
8Active change the nature of the
stressor Examples positive reinterpretation of
event, religion Avoidant activities or mental
states that keep one from addressing the
stressor Examples mental and behavioural
disengagement
9Changing the nature of the stressor (rare)
- Stress
- ?
- Appraisal
- ?
- Coping
Changing your perception of the stress (common)
Employing stress management strategies
10Resources
- Coping resources are social and personal
characteristics upon which people may draw when
dealing with stressors (Pearlin and Schooler,
1978) - Social resources i.e. social support (ready
availability SES dependent) - Psychological resources - personal
characteristics, i.e. self-esteem,
self-denigration, mastery, perceived sense of
control (unevenly distributed by SES) - Coping resources knowledge and ability to use
different coping strategies (aka. coping
repertoire) - Resources are thought to influence the choice and
efficiency of coping strategies (i.e. perhaps
people in lower SES less likely to choose active,
problem-based approaches because of decreased
social support and self-esteem) - How do resources fit in aforementioned models?
11Measuring Coping
- Ways of Coping Checklist (WCC) (Lazarus
Folkman) - Empirically based
- 68 Yes/No items
- How participants respond to a particular
stressful event - 7 scales relating to problem (1) and
emotion-focused (6) problem -coping strategies
problem-focused, seeking social support,
blamed-self, avoidance, wishful thinking - Scoring developed through factor analysis with
100 men - Ways of Coping Questionnaire (WCQ) (Lazarus
Folkman) - Modified from WCC
- 66 items (4 point Likert scales)
- 8 scales problem-focused, wishful thinking,
distancing, emphasizing the positive,
self-blame, seeking social support,
tension-reduction, self-isolation
12COPE (Carver, 1989)
- A theoretically based model derived from the
Lazarus model of stress and a model of
behavioural self-regulation - 13 scales were developed relating to either
problem-focused or emotion-focused strategies
(active coping, planning, suppression of
competing activities, restraint coping, seeking
social support for instrumental reasons, seeking
social support for emotional reasons, venting of
emotions, behavioural disengagement,
helplessness, positive reinterpretation and
growth, denial, acceptance, turning to religion) - Likert scales (frequencies of use)
- Items were written and piloted that were either
shown in previous studies or theoretically
believed to be functional or non-functional
elements of coping - Test-retest reliability established
- Correlation between scales examined
- Do these instruments seem comprehensive? Any
potential problems?
13Effectiveness of Coping Strategies
- How coping purges problem and hardships from our
lives - Also how well it prevents hardships from
resulting in emotional stress
14In general
- The larger a persons coping repertoire, the
better he or she will cope - Problem-focused coping strategies are seen as
more beneficial for well-being - Emotion-focused coping strategies sometimes
shown beneficial in the short-run
15Coping and Health Models
- Coping has a direct impact on health (through
blood pressure, rate of recovery etc.) - Coping has an indirect impact on health (through
changing health behaviours i.e. visiting a
physician) - Coping acts as a stress buffer
16Link to health
- Use of denial and withdrawal linked to
psychological stress and depression (MacArthur,
1998) - Worse outcomes for emotionally distressed cancer
and cardiac patients (MacArthur, 1998)
17Gender, Stress and Coping
- Women appear to have similar numbers of life
events to men but perceive them as more negative
and less controllable (Matud, 2004), Women tend
to have more life events - Women tend to use avoidance and emotional coping
styles more frequently than men (Matud, 2004)
(Pearlin Schooler, 1978) - Men tend to use problem-based coping styles more
frequently (Matud, 2004) - Women report more somatic symptoms than men
(Matud, 2004) - Note These findings have not been replicated
across the board
18Appraisal, Resources, Personality/Disposition
(Coping styles)
Women
Stress
Coping
Mental Illness
Physical Health Outcomes
Life Events
Emotion-focused, avoidance
No differential in self-rated health
Distress
Chronic Stress
Problem-focused
Daily Hassles
19Appraisal, Resources, Personality/Disposition
(Coping styles)
Men
Stress
Coping
Mental Illness
Physical Health Outcomes
Life Events
Emotion-focused, avoidance
Addictive behaviour (eg. heavy drinking)
No differential in self-rated health
Chronic Stress
Problem-focused
Daily Hassles
20SES and Coping
- Education is more strongly correlated to coping
than income - People with lower education levels tend to have
more limited coping repertoires (i.e. do not have
access to coping techniques such as positive
comparisons, devaluation) - People with less education have fewer resources
(reliable social support, self-esteem, mastery) - People with less education tend use more
emotion-focused strategies, compared to those
with higher education who utilize problem-focused
strategies (Pearlin Schooler)
21Summary What is known
- Stressors unevenly distributed -gt Of the three
types of stresses (life events, chronic stress
and daily hassles) -gt people in LES not shown to
experience more undesirable life events but more
daily hassles (depends on what events measured in
investigation) (Thoits, 1995) - Susceptible groups more emotionally reactive to
stressors (Thoits, 1995) - Uneven distribution of positive coping
strategies among gender and socioeconomic status
22What is left to be uncovered
- Should money and flexibility should be considered
coping strategies? - Specific mechanisms of action in the
stress-coping relationship - How does coping mediate (or moderate) the stress
mental health relationship? - The physical illness link (the mental-physical
health link and how coping mediates the
stress-physical health relationship) - Physiological level explanations
23References
- Carver CS and Scheier MF. Assessing Coping
Strategies A Theoretically Based Approach
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
1989, Vol. 56, No. 2, 267-283 - Endler, Norman, Parker, James D Multidimensional
assessment of coping A critical evaluation.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
1990 May Vol 58(5) 844-854 - Folkman S et al. Dynamics of a Stressful
Encounter Cognitive Appraisal, Coping, and
Encounter Outcomes Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology 1986, Vol. 50, No. 5, 992-1003 - MacArthur JD and MacArthur CT. Research Network
on Socioeconomic Status and Health Coping
Strategies. Last revised 1998. Available
http//www.macses.ucsf.edu/Research/Psychosocial/n
otebook/coping.html Retrieved February 25, 2008 - Matud PI. Gender Differences in Stress and Coping
Styles. Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology. 2004 377 - Pearlin LI and Schooler C. The Structure of
Coping. Journal of Health and Social Behavior.
19 2-21 - Thoits PA. Stress, Coping and Social Support
Processes Where are we? What next? Journal of
Health and Social Behavior. 1995 (Extra Issue )
53-79 - Zeidner M and Endler NS. Handbook of Coping
Theory, Research, Applications. Available
http//books.google.ca/books?idIZWHsi0DwZICdqha
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ca/search?hlenqhandbookofcopingsaXoiprint
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Retrieved February 26, 2008