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Can Stress Make You Ill?

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Title: Can Stress Make You Ill?


1
Can Stress Make You Ill?
Rona Moss-Morris Professor of Health Psychology
2
DIVISION OF HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
www.bps.org.uk/dhpEmail dhp_at_bps.org.uk
3
Lecture outline
  • The Biopsychosocial Model of health and illness
  • What is stress and how do we measure it?
  • The Pittsburgh Common Cold Studies
  • Buffers between stress and illness
  • Stress and coping model
  • Social support

4
The Biomedical Model
5
The Biopsychosocial Model
Illness
6
Stressors
  • Any circumstances that threaten or are perceived
    to threaten ones well-being and thereby tax
    ones coping ability
  • An upcoming exam
  • Attending a party where you dont know anyone
  • Being diagnosed with a serious illness
  • Break up of a relationship

7
Stress
  • Our physiological psychological responses to
    conditions that threaten or challenge us in some
    way
  • Psychological responses include
  • Emotions e.g. anxiety
  • Thoughts e.g. No-one will talk to me
  • Behaviours e.g. drinking too much

8
Fight-or-Flight (Walter Canon, 1932)aggressive
or withdrawal responses to stress
9
Stress response controlled by the brain
10
Physiological Stress Response
Stimulates muscles
11
Stress and measurement
  • Environmental
  • Psychological
  • Biological

12
Measuring StressSocial Readjustment Rating Scale
  • Events causing the greatest life changes
    considered most stressful
  • Death of a spouse
  • Divorce
  • Marriage
  • Fired from work
  • Holmes and Rahe, 1967

13
SRSS Scores Health
(Rahe, et.al, 1964)
14
The Daily Hassles Scale
  • Measures irritating, daily demands as rated by
    the person
  • concerns about weight
  • too many things to do
  • misplacing things
  • argument with family member,
  • Stronger associations with illness better than
    the SRRS
  • Kanner et al. (1981)

15
Cohens Perceived Stress Scale (PSS)
  • 10 item questionnaire rated over past month
  • how often have you felt nervous or stressed
  • how often have you felt on top of things
  • how often have you been upset because of
    something that happened unexpectedly
  • how often have you felt difficulties were piling
    up so high that you could not overcome them

16
The Common Cold Studies (Cohen et al 1991 1993)
  • Large scale prospective experimental
    investigations of stress and the common cold
  • Age, gender, weight, ethnicity, season, smoking,
    alcohol, diet exercise, sleep not related to
    stress and illness
  • PSS
  • Life events
  • Mood
  • Replicated virus
  • Clinical symptoms

Exposed to cold virus
17
How many people developed colds?
  • Viral Infection
  • 82 of the volunteers receiving virus were
    infected.
  • Clinical Colds
  • Clinical Colds both infected and diagnosed by
    the clinician as having a clinical cold.
  • 38 developed clinical colds.

18
Which stress factors predicted colds?
  • Perceived Stress (PSS)
  • Life events
  • Negative mood
  • PSS negative mood predicted actual viral
    infection
  • Life events predicted development of clinical
    symptoms

19
Associations between each of the stress measures
and rates of clinical colds
20
Does the type of stressor matter? Cohen et al.
(1998) Health psychology, 17, 214-223
  • Life Events and Difficulties Schedule (LEDS
    Brown Harris, 1989)
  • Detailed interview schedule
  • Rates events in the last year as
  • severe acute events
  • severe chronic difficulty (stressor)

21
Relative risk of developing a cold by stressor
duration
22
Does the type of stressor matter? Conclusions
  • Longer, more chronic stress more infection
  • Interpersonal and work stress more infections

23
Explaining the relationship between stress and
illness
  • Direct effects hypothesis
  • stress impacts on our hormones and immune
    systems
  • Indirect effects hypothesis
  • stress impacts on health through changes in
    health behaviour e.g. diet, exercise, smoking,
    drinking

24
Mediators or Mechanisms
  • Hormones?
  • Immune system?
  • Behaviours?
  • Stress Common cold

25
Behaviour as a Mechanisms
  • Health behaviours
  • Stress Common cold

26
Hormones as Mechanisms
  • Neuroendocrine hormones
  • e.g. adrenal, cortisol
  • Stress Common cold


27
Immune System as a Mechanisms
  • Increase in IL-6 Cytokines
  • Stress Common cold


28
Explaining the Cytokine pathways
  • Acute stress related to more cortisol which can
    suppress immune responsiveness
  • Chronic ongoing stress related to decreased
    cortisol
  • Less cortisol may lead to inability to switch off
    immune responsiveness
  • Body produces more IL-6 therefore more
    symptoms.

29
Stress and Stroke-Study
  • 2,303 Finnish middle-aged white men followed for
    11 years
  • Measured blood pressure spikes (in anticipation
    of an exercise test)
  • Men with above average blood pressure spikes had
    a 72 greater risk of developing a stroke in the
    following 11 years
  • Susan A. Everson et al., 2001

30
Moderators of Stress
  • Appraisal and Coping
  • Social Support

31
Stress and Coping Model(Folkman Lazerus, 1984)
Secondary Appraisal What resources do I have to
cope with this threat?
Coping Strategy
32
Emotion Focused Coping
  • Coping through emotional approach involves
    actively processing and expressing emotion
    (Stanton et al. 2000).
  • The emotional approach scale
  • emotional processing - I take time to figure out
    what Im really feeling
  • emotional expression ( I let my feelings come
    out freely)

33
Emotional Processing and Cancer
  • Study of women with stage I or II breast cancer
    over 3 months (Stanton et al. 2000)
  • coping through emotional expression associated
    with improved
  • decreased distress,
  • fewer medical visits
  • increased vigour at 3 months
  • Coping through emotional processing associated
    with increases in distress
  • Emotional processing appears to be adaptive in
    the short term
  • Over the longer term may become ruminative and
    therefore less beneficial in terms of adjustment.

34
Coping Effectiveness
  • The contextual approach - no strategy is
    inherently bad
  • Short term and long term effects
  • Some strategies like avoidance, denial and
    emotional processing may work well in short term
    but not in long term
  • Controllable stressors better linked to problem
    focused coping and uncontrollable to emotion
    focused coping.
  • Appraisals of coping efficacy

35
What is social support (SS)?
  • Social network
  • Perceived social support (amount available)
  • Received social support

36
Pathways from SS to health/illness
  • Cardiovascular (heart) system
  • individuals with high SS at work have lower mean
    heart rate than those with low SS (Unden et al.,
    1991)
  • Immune system
  • individuals with more social ties less
    susceptible to common cold (Cohen et al., 1997)
    immunoglobin A (first line of defence) higher in
    college students with high SS (Baron et al.,
    1990)
  • Neuroendocrine system (hormones)
  • presence of supportive companion during stress
    test lower cortisol response (Kirschbaum et al.,
    1995)

37
Summary and Conclusions
  • Stress is linked to increased illness
    particularly chronic stress
  • This seems to occur through direct effects on
    immune responsiveness (overactive rather than
    underactive)
  • Stress can be buffered through the way people
    perceive situations, their coping style and
    social support
  • These buffers can be used in interventions to
    reduce impact of stress.

38
DIVISION OF HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
www.bps.org.uk/dhpEmail dhp_at_bps.org.uk
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