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Stress and Illness What is the Link

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Title: Stress and Illness What is the Link


1
Stress and IllnessWhat is the Link?
  • EPI 6181
  • February 13, 2008
  • Roxanne Ward

2
So, what is stress?
3
Definitions
  • Stress (Hans Selye)
  • Mechanism the non-specific response of the body
    to any demand
  • Can be good (eustress) or bad (distress)
  • Stress (Wolf - 1953)
  • Mans response to many sorts of noxious agents
    and threats, including meaning for individual
  • Interaction between organism and environment
    dynamic
  • Stress (Tabers Medical Dictionary)
  • The result produced when a structure, system is
    acted upon by a stressor. Generally believed
    that biological organisms require a certain
    amount of stress in order to maintain their
    well-being
  • Strain (Dictionary)
  • To injure by making too strong an effort or
    excessive use

4
Physiology of Stress
  • Nervous System
  • Central
  • Peripheral
  • Autonomic
  • Sympathetic
  • Parasympathetic
  • Endocrine System
  • Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis
  • Sympathetic Adrenal Medulla (SAM) response

5
Autonomic Nervous System
6
Endocrine System
  • Sympathetic Adrenal Medulla Response

Hypothalamus
Sympathetic NS
Adrenal Medulla
Epinephrine Norepinephrine
HR, BP, RR, BS
7
Endocrine System
HPA axis
Hypothalamus
ACTH
Adrenal Cortex
Glucocorticoids Mineralcorticoids
Protein Fat Metabolism, BP Blood volume
Inflammatory Response
8
The Pioneers Their Contributions
  • Cannon Physiologist (1920s)
  • Homeostasis
  • A condition which may vary but which is
    relatively constant
  • Fight or Flight Response (basic survival
    instinct)
  • Fundamental physiologic response to bodys
    perceived threat to survival

9
The Pioneers Their Contributions
  • Hans Selye (1956)
  • The General Adaptation Syndrome
  • Different diseases seem to cause similar symptoms
    general response
  • Operates in response to longer term exposure to
    stress

10
General Adaptation Syndrome
SAM activated
HPA activated
11
Problems with Response- Based Views
  • Unable to explain different responses in
    different individuals
  • Dont consider the effect of individuals
    perception on the stress response
  • Circularity of theory

12
Other Important Contributors
  • Martin Seligman
  • Learned Helplessness (1967)
  • Related to lack of control
  • Richard Lazarus
  • Cognitive Motivational Relational Theory of
    Emotion (1986)
  • Response to stress affected by individuals
    thoughts perceptions relational phenomenon
    between individual and environment
  • Takes into account individual differences in
    motivational and cognitive variables
  • Well-known for work on coping

13
  • Cox (1978)
  • Stress as a perceptual phenomenon

Demand
Reappraisal
Perception
Stress Responses
Cognitive/Behavioral Response
14
Problems With Model
  • How do we account for perceptions of all
    individuals?
  • We often respond to stress/demands without
    conscious evaluation

15
How To Measure Stress?
  • Three methods to assess role of stress in disease
    risk
  • Environmental what are the objective conditions
    that promote stress lead to disease (stimulus
    based)
  • Psychological based on individuals
    interpretation of the meaning of the event and
    ability to cope Based solely on
    individuals perception
  • Biological activation of physiologic systems
    affected by psychological physically demanding
    conditions (Stress hormones, cardiovascular
    response, immune measures)

16
Environmental Perspective
  • Checklist
  • Social Readjustment Rating Scale (SRRS) (Holmes
    Rahe 1967)
  • Includes both positive negative events
  • Some items could be viewed as symptoms or
    consequences of illness
  • Interview Measurement
  • Allows probing beneficial when looking at
    relationship of timing between event and response
  • Expensive, requires special training

17
Environmental Perspective (2)
  • Daily Within Day Event Measures
  • Assess impact of daily events on physical
    mental health
  • Daily Life Experience (DLE) Checklist
  • Hassles Scale
  • Problems with circularity and confounding some
    items on scale resemble psychological symptoms
  • Measurement of Chronic Stressors
  • Makes sense to link chronic stress to diseases
    that develop over a period of time
  • Self Report, Observational, Interviews
  • Life Events Difficulty Schedule (LEDS)
  • Mult-measure may control for measurement error

18
Psychological Perspective
  • Measurement of stress appraisal
  • Single-item questions Self-report scales
    Interview-based
  • How to differentiate appraisal from other
    psychological processes?
  • Measurement of affective response
  • Most common method Adjective Checklists
  • Observational methods

19
Biological Perspective
  • Measurement of Stress Hormones
  • Epinephrine, norepinephrine corticosteriods
    cortisol, serotonin
  • Measurement of Cardiovascular Responses
  • Role in maintaining homeostasis
  • Blood Pressure, Heart rate, ECG
  • Measures of Immune Response

20
Stress Illness
  • Stress linked to
  • Cardiovascular Disease
  • Gastric Ulcers
  • Hypertension
  • Viral illness
  • Cancer?
  • Anxiety
  • Depression

21
Stress The Illness Connection
  • Link between breast cancer stress?
  • Potential relation between stress and risk of
    breast cancer different study designs,
    conflicting results
  • Risk of breast cancer and acute stress of major
    life events, but less attention to effect of
    perceived daily stress
  • 2005 Self Reported stress risk of breast
    cancer prospective cohort study
  • Reduced risk of breast cancer
  • 2004 Job stress breast cancer risk
  • Job stress not related to increase in breast
    cancer risk

22
Social Stress
  • Origins
  • Individual experiences of ongoing strains
    negative events within social roles are products
    of social stratification by gender, race, social
    class
  • Outcome of social organization systematic
    discrimination inequity
  • Are members of lower class groups physically more
    vulnerable to effects of stressors?

23
Social Status Illness Is Stress the Path
Between?
  • Summary of literature (Thoits)
  • Experience of negative major life events
    chronic difficulties risk of psych problems
    physical illness
  • Sense of personal control over life circumstances
    psych symptoms acts as buffer
  • Social integration probability of morbidity
    mortality
  • Perceived emotional support psych symptoms
    acts as buffer to neg. events chronic strains

24
Research
  • 2008 The influence of active coping perceived
    stress on health disparities in a multi-ethnic
    low income sample
  • Higher perceived stress related to poorer general
    health for all ethno-racial groups
  • Perceived stress critical component in
    understanding health outcomes

25
Research
  • 2007 Subjective social status (SSS), objective
    SES cardiovascular risk in women
  • Women with SSS had more cardiovascular risk
    behaviors
  • Evidence that perception of ones social status
    could have important health implications beyond
    objective SES

26
References
  • Cohen S, Kessler RC, Gordon LU. Measuring stress.
    New York Oxford University Press, 1995.
  • Thoits PA. Stress, coping, and social support
    processes where are we? What next? J Health Soc
    Behav 199536(Suppl)53.
  • Lazarus RS, From psychological stress to the
    emotions A history of changing outlooks. Annu
    Rev Psychol 1993441-21.
  • Cassel J. Psychosocial processes and stress
    theoretical formulation. Int J Health Serv
    1974447182
  • Dohrenwend BP, Shrout P. Hassles in the
    conceptualization and measurement of life stress
    variables. Am Psychol 198540780-785.
  • Theorell T, Karasek RA. Current issues relation
    to psychosocial job strain and cardiovascular
    disease research. J Occup Health Psychol
    199619-26.
  • Cooper CL, Faragher EB. Psychosocial stress and
    breast cancer. In Plotnikoff N, ed. Stress and
    immunity. Boca Raton CRC Press Inc,
    1991259-282.
  • Watson J, Logan H, Tomar SL. The influence of
    active coping and perceived stress on health
    disparities in a multi-ethnic low income sample.
    BMC Public Health 2008 8 41.
  • Schernhammer E, Hankinson S. Job stress and
    breast cancer risk The nurses health study. Am
    J Epi 20041601079-1086.
  • Ghaed SG, Gallo LC. Subjective social status,
    objective socioeconomic status and cardiovascular
    risk in women. Health Psychol 200726(6)668-674.
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