Title: Stress Study Guide
1Stress Study Guide
- Good vs. Bad stress
- Autonomic Nervous System
- Mind/Body connection
- Most common stressors
- Immune system
- Fight or Flight
- A/B Personality Types
- Psychosomatic symptoms vs. Hypochondriac symptoms
- What are they and why do people get different
symptoms? - Self-efficacy
- Locus of Control
- Emotion vs. Problem-Focused Coping (control and
change yourself or the situation) - Coping with stress healthy and non-healthy
methods - Biofeedback
- Meditation
- GAS (General Adaptation Syndrome Alarm,
Resistance, Exhaustion) - Effects of exercise
- Dealing with conflict approach/avoidance
- PTSD
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3- To be totally without stress is to be
dead. - - Hans Selye
4- Negative bad stress vs. Positive good stress
how can that be? - Review
- Autonomic Nervous System
5- Stress is any time your body has to adjust to any
kind of change. Ex. - Stress causes a significant overload to the MIND
and BODY. - 1 stressor
- 2 stressor
6- People who report a high level of stress are
twice as likely to get a cold. - Being stressed out is bad for your body!
- Hormones are produced when you stress out
these hormones suppress the IMMUNE SYSTEM, thus
making the body more susceptible to diseases,
viruses and infections. Ex. Womans husband dies.
7- Immune System the bodys defense and
surveillance network of cells and chemicals that
fight off bacteria, viruses and other foreign or
toxic substances.
8Most vulnerable to disease
- People recently
- Fired
- Divorced
- Widowed
- Finnish study
- 96,000 widowed people study
- Risk of death doubled in the week following
partners death - Dying of a broken heart
9Stress, Health and Coping
-
- FIGHT OR FLIGHT RESPONSE
- Primitive physiological responses (sweat, heart
rate increase etc.) that arouse and prepare the
body (muscles and brain) for action. Its
triggered by physical or psychological situations
that are new, threatening or challenging. - This response provides the body with increased
energy to deal with perceived threatening
situations whether real or imagined. - The number of fight or flight we experience
depends on our levels of stress.
10- Its a survival mechanism to prepare the body for
action and survival its automatic. It used to
be used to prepare the body to escape from
predators now we use the same response for
non-threatening situations such as traffic. - If we overuse it and
- keep our body in a
- near constant state
- of arousal painful
- physical symptoms
11Biggest problem with stress
- Your body cant distinguish between physical
stress and mental stress. - So your body is ready to FIGHT or FLEE even when
thats not what you need to do - This activation is hard on your body and youre
more likely to get sick if it continues
12Are there gender differences? Yes!
- Sources are often different
- Married men show better mental health than
married women - Caring for children is more stressful than almost
any job - New research men are more likely to have fight
or flight reaction, while women have tend and
befriend reaction (seek social support) - Women emotional coping
- Men problem-solving strategies
13Does EXERCISE help alleviate stress?
-
- YES working out regularly
- can help alleviate physical
- and mental stress. Stress causes a lot of
physical problems that can be overcome with
exercise (obesity, muscle aches etc.). It also
releases endorphins (the feel-good chemicals)
that produce a calming effect.
142 Types of Personality
15The Type A PersonalityWe try harder!!!
- Early Characteristics
- Impatient, aggressive, workaholic, competitive,
time-urgent, HOSTILE, bossy, road rage, fast
drivers, fast talkers, list makers, prefer to
work alone - More likely to suffer from heart attack
(hostility plus depression in men is best
predictor) their hearts cant take the stress - To CHANGE
- Reduce cynical mistrust of others
- Reduce frequency and intensity of anger and rage
- Learn to treat others with kindness and develop
skills to handle stress
16Cardiologists Meyer Friedman and Roy Rosenhan
- Mid-1950s, San Francisco
- Noticed that the chairs in their waiting rooms
were all worn out along the front edges but
almost like new otherwise - Thought their patients might be the type of
people who often sit on the edges of their chairs - Realized other characteristics of male heart
patients - Competitive and ambitious
- Speak rapidly and interrupt others
- Frequently hostile and angry
17Changing from Type A to Type B and lessening the
effect of stress
- Positive self-statements
- Challenge appraisal
- Exercise
- Progressive relaxation
- Biofeedback
- Learn to meditate
18Some other Type A thoughts
- Not just hostility but also MISTRUST of other
people a CYNICISM - Can it be genetic?
- Is it a result of failure to resolve Eriksons
first stage trust vs. mistrust? - More research needed to find link between
personality and biology - Take a test to see if youre a Type A
19Type B Personality
- Easygoing, calm, relaxed and patient, slow
- drivers, slow talkers
- Less likely to get heart attacks, colds, ulcers
etc.
20- Executives more likely to be type A or B?
- New Type A/B
- Gender adjectives for both.
21Hans Selye 1907-1982
22GENERAL ADAPTATION SYNDROME GASThe pattern
your body goes through when its stressed.
- ALARM STAGE initial reaction to stress fight
or flight response which causes physiological
arousal. Short bursts of stress - bodies go in
and out of this stage many times a day. Can be
false alarms. Ex.
23- RESISTANCE STAGE eye of the storm bodys
reaction to continued stress bodily responses
return to normal levels to do this, since the
body is stressed, the body has to use up great
stores of energy. Body seems to be functioning
normally but actually it has to work 2x as hard
to do this. - EXHAUSTION STAGE Bodys reaction to long-term,
continuous stress actual breakdown in internal
organs or weakening of the infection-fighting
immune system. Body gets tired of constant state
of arousal. During this stage, for example,
stomach pains turn into ulcers. PAY BACK! Ex.
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25How your body reacts to stress
26Effect of sustained stress
- Change in immune system reduces bodys resistance
to disease - Can alter a diseases course
- Response in heart
- Increase in blood pressure
- Increase in blood clotting
- Increase in chance of clots
- Increase in likelihood that loose fat deposits
will close off coronary arteries - Arrhythmias
27Life expectancy in Russia1990-93
- Following collapse of Russian socialism
- Mushrooming rates of divorce, murder, suicide,
stress-related diseases - Life expectancy for Russian men plummeted
- From 64 years to 58.9 years
- Contrast
- Monks with a relatively peaceful life
- Lowest rate of heart attacks
28PHYSIOLOGICAL RESPONSES
- PSYCHOSOMATIC SYMPTOMS
- psycho mind somatic body
- Real physical symptoms that are caused by
psychological factors such as stress. - 70-90 health problems!
- Real tissue damage (unlike hypochondriac
imagined physical ailments)
29Common psychosomatic symptoms
- Outbreaks of herpes (facial or genital)
- High blood pressure
- Cardiovascular difficulties
- Pains in neck, shoulders, back
- Grinding teeth during sleep
- Recurring colds of flu
- Eating problems
- Headaches
- Stomach problems
- Intestinal difficulties
- Fatigue without physical exertion
- Insomnia
- Skin problems or rashes
- Asthma and allergy flareups
30- Prolonged stress can produce physical
deterioration and psychosomatic symptoms (not the
same as hypochondriacal symptoms when a person
misinterprets physical sensations as symptoms of
disease!).
31Why does one person have some psychosomatic
symptoms and someone else have different ones?
(And some people dont have any!)
32- Whatever part of our body is genetically
vulnerable will be attacked (different for
different people). - The parts of our bodies that are targeted or
weakened will be especially vulnerable during
stress. - When and why stressors surface
- Inherited predisposition
- Nutrition
- Lifestyle
- Stressful situation
- Appraisal of situation as a threat
33Psychosomatic symptoms are a clear demonstration
of the Mind-Body connection
34Dealing with Conflict
- Having to choose between two (or more)
possibilities - Approach-approach
- Both possibilities are appealing
- Avoidance-avoidance
- Both possibilities are disagreeable
- Approach-avoidance
- Situation has good and bad possibilities
- Having to choose can be very stressful
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382 Ways to COPE with STRESS
- PROBLEM-FOCUSED Coping
- Change the situation (for when you have
control). - Ex.
- EMOTION-FOCUSED Coping
- Change ourselves (for when we have no control).
- EF coping changes how we think about the
situation. - Ex.
- Coping control!
39Which one we use depends on the situation and how
much control we have (or think we have).Control
sometimes you can only change yourself and
sometimes you should change the
situation.Coping less control more
stress(Social support better health)
40 So the good (or bad ) news may
be
- How stressed we are depends on how we appraise
events.
41Stress appraisal
- Appraisal Response
- THREAT Panic,
- (Yikes, this is freeze up
- beyond me!)
- CHALLENGE Aroused,
- (Ive got to apply focused
- all I know!)
-
- Stressful event
- (tough math test)
42One of lifes best coping mechanisms is to know
the difference between an inconvenience and a
problem.If you break your neck, if you have
nothing to eat, if your house is on fire then
youve got a problem. Everything else is an
inconvenience.Life is inconvenient. Life is
lumpy. A lump in the oatmeal, a lump in the
throat and a lump in the breast are not the same
kind of lump. One needs to learn the
difference.- Robert Fulghum
43Our feelings of perceived controlgame
- Locus of control our belief about how much
control we have over our situations in our lives - External locus of control - more stress!
- Belief that we dont have much control
- because fate determines what happens to us
- Internal locus of control
- Belief that we have at least some control over
what happens to us - People with an internal locus of control are more
likely to have self-efficacy and are healthier - Studies show better mental health, report of
less stress, - preventive health measures taken
44Why do people appraise stress differently?
- Our personality makes a difference
- High Self-efficacy/Internal Locus of Control and
hardiness Optimism - Low Self-efficacy/External Locus of Control -
Pessimism - Negative affectivity
- Pessimistic explanatory style
- Suffer more illnesses
- More stress
- Die earlier
- More likely to die of a second heart attack
- Type A personality vs. Type B personality
45The importance of Optimism
- Shown to predict
- Good health
- Immune system functioning
- Faster rehabilitation
- Living longer
46Biofeedback
47Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
- Severe psychological symptoms suffered after
experiencing a traumatic event - Recurring and disturbing real memories
- Recurring nightmares
- Intense fear and anxiety
48MODEL OF STRESS Include stressors, perceptions,
physical and psychological reaction and coping
responses.
- 1. Brainstorm examples of stressors that are
common among students (arguments with parents
etc.) - 2. After a long list has been developed your
group must - A Decide on the 6 that occur most frequently.
- B Come up with a list of perceptual statements or
self-statements commonly used by students when
dealing with stress (I cant deal with this
anymore) and pick most common statements. - C Decide what kinds of physical and psychological
stress reactions are most common (headaches etc.) - D Frequently used coping methods (shopping,
drinking) and circle non-healthy methods and come
up with alternative and healthier methods.