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Chapter 15 Notes: Health, Stress, and Coping

Health Psychology: study of ways to use behavioral principles to prevent illness and promote health

-unhealthy behavior leads to half of all deaths in North America

Behavioral medicine: study of behavioral factors I medicine, physical fitness, and medical treatment.

Lifestyle diseases: heart disease, stroke, cancer

Disease-prone personality: depressed, anxious, hostile and often ill

Depression: associated with decreased exercise, poor eating habits

Smoking:

-largest preventable cause of death

-single most lethal behavioral risk factor

-1 in 10 smokers have long-term success in quitting

-refusal skills learning: role-play refusal/resistance to peer pressure

Life Skills Training

-practice in stress reduction, self-protection, decision-making, social skills,

self-control

Stress

-problem if prolonged or severe

-how we perceive events and react to them

Stressor

-event that challenges or threatens a person

-unpredictable events increase stress

-pressure increases stress (meeting unreasonable external demands or

expectations); lack of control

Burnout: emotional exhaustion; fatigues, apathetic, cynical; detached from job,

reduced personal accomplishment

-helping professions

-the opposite of job engagement

-helped with support systems

Lazarus

-2 important steps in managing a threat

-primary appraisal: decide if situation is relevant or irrelevant, positive or

Threatening

-secondary appraisal: assess resources and choose a way to meet threat

If situation is threatening:

-problem-focused coping: managing or altering the distressing situation

Itself

-emotion-focused coping: people try to control emotions or reactions to

situation

-these can occur together

Frustration: negative emotional state when prevented from reaching desired goals

-external frustration: condition outside of individual

(delays, rejection, loss)

-personal frustration: based on personal characteristics

-too short for basketball

-poor grades for med school

Reactions to Frustration
-aggression: response made with intent to harm person or object

-displaced aggression: targets are safer, less likely to retaliate

-unemployment increases and so does

child abuse

-scapegoating: blaming person or groups for conditions not of their

making

-layoffs lead to increase in violence

-escape: examples: dropping out of school, using drugs

Conflict: must choose between contradictory needs, desires, motives, or demands

Approach-Approach Conflict

-easiest to resolve

-choose between 2 positive desirable alternatives (e.g., 2 desserts)

-Avoidance-Avoidance Conflict

-choose between 2 negative alternatives (e.g., bad job vs.

unemployment, burn in fire or jump)

-indecision, inaction

-Approach-Avoidance Conflict

-attracted to and repelled by same goal (e.g., marry someone your

parents don’t like

-ambivalence, partial approach

-Multiple Conflicts

-neither completely positive or negative

Defense Mechanisms

-Denial: refuse to accept (death, illness)

-Repression: unconsciously preventing painful or dangerous thoughts

from entering awareness

-Reaction Formation: exaggerate behavior opposite to what you feel

-e.g., parent overprotective toward unwanted child

-Regression: return to earlier, less demanding situations

-Projection: see own impulses, feelings in others

-exaggerating negative traits in others

-Rationalization: justify actions by giving false reasons for them

-Compensation: use against feeling of inferiority

-Sublimation: work off frustrated desires through socially acceptable

activities

-channel aggression by becoming boxer or lying by becoming a

novelist

Learned Helplessness: Seligman

-acquired inability to overcome obstacle and avoid aversive stimuli

-divided box: -dogs learn to jump to other side to escape shock

-with warning, learn to leap to avoid shock

-but, if trained before in box with harness, don’t try to escape

Depression and Learned Helplessness

-both involve despondency, hopelessness, powerlessness

-decreased activity, sex drive and appetite

16 to 30% of student population is depressed at any given time

-stress from school, pressure to choose a career, loneliness, poor grades,

relationship issues

Recognizing Depression

-consistent, negative opinion of self

-frequent self-criticism and blame

-negative interpretation of events that normally don’t bother you

-future looks bleak

-responsibilities feel overwhelming

Stress and Health

-scales often geared toward specific populations

Hassles, Microstressors

-worse if related to self-worth

Lazarus: frequent and severe hassles more predictive of day-to-day

health than major life events

-major life events predicted health problems 1 to 2 years later

Psychosomatic Disorders

-psychological factors contribute to actual bodily damage

Hypochondriacs: imagine they suffer from diseases

Biofeedback: information given about ongoing bodily functions

-leads to control of these functions

-treatment for migraines

Cardiac Personality

-at risk for cardiac disease

-Type A: twice as much heart disease as Type B

-Type A:

-ambitious, competitive, achievement-oriented, time urgency

-hostility strongly correlated with increased risk of heart attack,

especially if it is bottled up

-helped with decrease in mistrust, decreased anger, increased

consideration

Hardy Personality

-resistant to stress

-sense of personal commitment to self, work, family, and other stabilizing

values

-feel control over their lives and their work

-see life as challenges rather than threats or problems

General Adaptation Syndrome

-series of bodily reactions to prolonged stress

-alarm reaction: stress hormones

-stage of resistance: alarm reaction disappears

-better able to cope with initial stressor

-stage of exhaustion: stress hormones are depleted

Immune System

-mobilizes defenses (white blood cells) against disease agents

-stress can affect immune system and increase susceptibility to disease

Modifying Ineffective Behavior

-slow down

-organize

-strike balance between work, family, social life

-recognize an accept your limitations

-seek social support

-write about your feelings

-coping statements; affirmations