cost effectiveness of healthy lifestyles
- occurs through…
less costly than treatment of disease
- occurs through indiv efforts, interaction (env shapes behav) w medical syst, mass media and legislation
Health enhancing vs health compromising behaviours
Health enhancing: exercise, eating healthy, sleep»_space; promote health
Health compromising; excessive drinking, smoking, drug use, unsafe sex, risk-taking behaviours»_space; undermine or harm current/future health
health and behaviour factors
obesity
health advocates (3)
Health habits (3)
socialization influences early health habits (3)
- window of vulnerability
Window of Vulnerability: adolescents may ignore early training
Targeting at risk ppl
problems:
teachable moment
2 examples
certain moments are better than others for teaching particular health practices
eg. emphasize teeth brushing at dentist visit
eg. stopping smoking during pregnancy
percentage of death
in the 1960s it was mostly (50.6%) CVD»_space; heart disease, stroke»_space; now its mostly cancer (28%)
- result of behaviour risk factor modifications/medial treatment
health behaviour
well behaviour: maintain/improve health or avoid illness
- depends on motivational factors»_space; perception of threat of disease (if you’re not sick you won’t try to be especially healthy»_space; good diet, exercise, etc)
symptom behaviour: ill person tries to determine and fix problem»_space; complaining, seeking help
sick role behaviour: treat illness»_space; adjust lifestyle
- sick ppl have a special “role”»_space; exempt from obligations/tasks»_space; stay home from school/work to recover
breast cancer health behaviour: women ages of 50-69 should get mammogram every 2 years (self/physician check not effective)
Illness prevention
Example: having clean teeth
problems in promoting wellness
Individual: health behaviours are less appealing and less convenient than unhealthy behav
Interpersonal: social factors»_space; marriage partners adopt each other’s behaviours»_space; family dynamics may get interrupted (eg. they go eat out when you’re on diet)
Community: more likely to do if gov’t/healthcare systems encourage
problems: insufficient funds for research, hard to adjust to diff age/sociocultural backgrounds, lacking safe spaces for exercise, fast food restaurant, health insurance
Reinforcement
+/-
Extinction
results in desirable state of affairs
extinction: if consequence of behaviour is eliminated, response tendency is weakened gradually
modeling and antecedents
modeling: learning vicariously (observational learning)
antecedents: internal/external stimuli that precede and set occasion
for behaviour»_space; habits
eg. coffee with cigarette after breakfast
conscientiousness association
dutiful, organized»_space; associated with practicing health behaviours (fitness, healthy diet, taking prescribed meds, etc)
optimistic beliefs
A. Health belief model
taking preventive action depends on assessment of threat to person and weight pros(benefits to health)/cons (barriers»_space; perceived costs) of taking action
eg. financial, psychological (embarrassing), or physical (distance to doctor’s office too far)
perceived threat factors:
sum = benefits - barriers: extent to which taking action is more beneficial than not
Shortcomings:
B. Theory of Planned Behaviour
ppl decide their intention in advance»_space; intentions are the best predictors of what ppl will do (goals make it much more likely)»_space; linking attitudes and intentions directly to behaviour
intention: do I intend to change my behaviour?»_space; just intention alone may not be enough
- barriers (like time, other business) get in the way
- environmental factors (eg. weather/seasonal effects)
- health goals are especially hard since you have to change complex habitual behaviour
shortcomings:
Theory of planned behaviour
planning: the bridge between goals (recommendations»_space; in order to maintain/see it through) and behaviour»_space; key variable in health behaviour
- beyond intention
- a mental simulation commits the indiv to perform a behaviour once the critical situation is encountered
a) action plans: plans regarding the initiation of behaviour (when, where, how structure)»_space; break it down into actionable units
b) coping plans: plans regarding the maintenance of behav in the face of barriers»_space; plan B instead of dropping behaviour
C. Stages of Change Model
readiness to change
- help people advance: describe in detail how to carry out change, plan for problems that may arise»_space; provides a framework for a wide range of potential interactions by health promoters (if they have a negative response, you need to talk to them about their failures/obstacles)
stages:
gender and health
- who lives longer?
why?
Sociocultural factors and health
relevant on national and international levels
Methods for promoting health
Providing info: what to do, when, how, where
Features to enhance motivation:
Motivational interviewing: resolve ambivalence in changing behav»_space; decisional balance and personalized feedback
Behavioural and cognitive methods: enhance ppls performance of preventive act»_space; manage antecedents and consequences»_space; enhance self-efficacy