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Health Psychology

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Marlatt & Gordon proposed CBT model of relapse ... Social support & CBT relapse prevention ... CBT program includes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Health Psychology


1
Health Psychology
2
Health Psychology
  • Health Psychology
  • Aggregate of educational, scientific, and
    professional contributions of psychology to the
    promotion and maintenance of health, the
    prevention and treatment of illness, and the
    identification of etiologic and diagnostic
    correlates of health, illness, and related
    dysfunction
  • Behavioral Medicine
  • Elements from the behavioral science disciplines
    that have relevant knowledge that can assist in
    health care, treatment, and illness prevention

3
Prevention Health Promotion
  • It is estimated that 50 of mortality from 10
    leading causes of death could be attributed to
    lifestyle
  • Health impairing habits referred to as behavioral
    pathogens
  • Beneficial or health-protective behavioral
    practices have been called behavioral immunogens

4
Prevention Health Psychology
  • It is estimated that 7 of 10 leading causes of
    death in the US could be significantly reduced if
    individuals could change 5 behaviors
  • Smoking
  • etoh abuse
  • diet
  • exercise
  • adherence to meds

5
Type A
  • 2 Cardiologists

6
Prevention and Health Promotion
  • Behavior is vital to maintaining good health
  • Prevention has been labeled jewel in crown of
    health psychology because of all of theories
    methods directed towards preventing or modifying
    behaviors
  • Primary
  • Secondary
  • Tertiary

7
Models of health behavior and health behavior
change
  • Health Belief model
  • One of earliest conceptual approaches to explain
    why people do or do not engage in health behavior
  • Proposed that ones motivation to engage in
    health-related behaviors depends on the
    interaction of several factors
  • 1) perceived susceptibility to disease
    perceived seriousness of an illness
  • 2) ones belief that engaging in health behavior
    will reduce perceived threat
  • 3) cost-benefits analysis of engaging in a
    behavior
  • 4) Cue to action

8
Models of health behavior and health behavior
change
  • Theory of Reasoned Action
  • We are rational decision-makers
  • behavior under voluntary control is determined by
    beliefs and attitudes
  • Most immediate influence on behavior
  • intention to engage in that behavior
  • Behavioral intentions influenced by 2 types of
    beliefs
  • persons attitude toward the behavior (favorable
    or unfavorable)
  • 2. subjective norm (perceived social pressure to
    or not to perform)
  • Uses a mathematical formula to specify how
    different beliefs combine to determine an
    individuals behavior

9
Models of health behavior and health behavior
change
  • Transtheoretical 5-stage Model (Prochaska
    DiClemente)
  • precontemplation
  • -No contemplation to change behavior in
    foreseeable future
  • Contemplation
  • -One begins to think about initiating change but
    doesnt
  • Preparation
  • -Taking early steps to change
  • Action
  • -When one modifies his/her behavior to overcome
    his/her problem
  • Maintenance
  • Work towards preventing slips or relapse

10
Tobacco
  • Scientists became concerned about health
    consequences of smoking in 1930s
  • In 1930
  • fewer than 3,000 deaths were attributed to lung
    cancer
  • 2000 lung cancer blamed for over 100,000
    deaths/year
  • Cigarettes have been linked to
  • Cancer
  • Serious pulmonary ailments
  • CVD

11
Tobacco
  • Cigarette smoking
  • 1 preventable cause of disease death in US
  • Responsible for 350,000/yr that is more than
  • drugs
  • etoh
  • traffic-related deaths
  • AIDS
  • suicides and homicides combined

12
Epidemiology
  • At least 50 million smokers in US
  • Almost ½ of smokers are women, but some say that
    female smokers outnumber male smokers
  • Smoking rate of teenage girls is increasing while
    the smoking rate of teenage boys is decreasing
  • Years ago, when cigarette smoking was on the
    rise, upper class was at forefront of trend
  • Ads showed MDs promoting their favorite brand
  • Now well-educated high SES have shown declines
  • Less than 20 of all MDs smoke
  • 50 of blue-collar workers smoke

13
Tobacco and women
  • Differences between men women in tobacco use
    from country to country
  • In Japan, China, Greece, and Indonesia, women
    smoke much less than men
  • In India, 52 of men smoke but only 3 of women
  • In Hong Kong, 23 of men smoke 4 for women
  • In US, Canada, and England, smoking rates are
    similar for men and women
  • Culture influences womens smoking rates

14
Tobacco and Women
  • Grunber et al (1991) different stages of tobacco
    use may explain gender differences
  • The three main stages are
  • Initiation
  • Women are more likely to experiment with smoking
  • Maintenance
  • Men are more likely to smoke more cigarettes per
    day and may expose themselves to higher doses of
    nicotine
  • Cessation
  • Has not been studied well, but men seem to
    respond better to interventions than women

15
Mortality
  • 2 pack/day smoker between ages of 30-35
  • life expectancy 9 yrs shorter than same age
    nonsmoker
  • Chances of dying are related to the overall
    lifetime exposure to smoking
  • Smokers who quit improve their chances of living
  • Takes 10-15 years of quitting before mortality
    rates of former smokers resemble those of
    nonsmokers

16
Morbidity
  • Smoking related illness each year cause
  • 145 million days of disability
  • over 80 million days of work lost
  • Smoking is leading cause of mortality
  • But is the leading cause of avoidable illness

17
Cardiovascular Disease
  • Men who smoked over a pack a day tripled their
    risk of dying from CVD
  • Risk of smoking has been documented in various
    racial ethnic groups women
  • While women have lower rates of heart disease
    than men, women who use oral contraceptives
    smoke greatly increase risk of heart disease
  • Oral contraceptives increases MI risk twofold,
    but risk is tenfold if woman also smokes
  • In most studies, cigar pipe smokers have lower
    risk than cigarettes

18
Cancer
  • Smokers are 10 times more likely to get lung
    cancer than those who never smoked
  • translates into a 1000 higher risk for smokers
  • Lung cancer almost unknown at beginning of the
    20th century, but now makes up ¼ of all cancers
  • Cancer rates are believed to be on decline, but
    trend is only visible when you remove lung cancer
    from the studies

19
Involuntary Smoking
  • The nonsmoker who is most affected by the smoke
    of others is the unborn child
  • Mothers who smoke have more low-birth weight
    babies
  • Low birth weight is risk factor for spontaneous
    abortion, fetal death and neonatal death
  • After birth, children who have smoking parents
    continue to be affected
  • They have more respiratory sx
  • They have more illness in general

20
Pathophysiology
  • Three major components of tobacco smoking are
  • Nicotine, Tar, and Carbon Monoxide
  • Nicotine produces the release of norepinephrine
    which increases resting heart rate, systolic BP
    and diastolic BP
  • Nicotine promotes disturbances in cardiac rhythms
    that may increase risk of fibrillation
  • Nicotine causes a rise in free fatty acids in the
    blood
  • Nicotine increases platelet stickiness which
    promotes clotting

21
Smoking Cessation
  • Quitting smoking is the easiest thing I have
    ever done. Ive done it a thousand times
  • Almost 90 of current smokers would like to quit
  • Almost all made at least 1 serious attempt
  • While success of quitting on your own is 5, most
    who quit did so w/o any formal program
  • Smokers quit or try to quit for many reasons
  • Health problems
  • are more successful at quitting
  • Social pressure, , set good example for kids

22
Smoking Cessation
  • Smoking cessation methods based on research
    concerning influences on smoking
  • Pharmacological studies in smoking
  • nicotine chewing gum
  • gradual fading of nicotine to prevent the
    withdrawal syndrome.
  • Conditioning influences has led to
  • stimulus control procedures
  • reinforcement for nonsmoking
  • aversive conditioning for smoking

23
Maintenance or Relapse
  • Marlatt Gordon proposed CBT model of relapse
  • If ex-smoker has a cigarette, it is a cognitive
    emotional reaction termed the abstinence
    violation effect
  • This effect has two parts
  • guilt from smoking, which is discrepant from the
    new self-image as a nonsmoker
  • attribution that smoking episode was due to
    personal weakness
  • The abstinence violation decreases self-esteem
    the will to keep trying
  • M G teach clients to separate a slip from a
    relapse. A slip is temporary, a relapse is long
    term

24
Maintenance or Relapse
  • Interventions based on this model try to identify
    high-risk situations, develop coping strategies,
    counteract abstinence violation w/ thoughts
  • There is evidence that smokers can identify their
    high-risk situations these situations are
    related to relapse
  • One study had subjects in a smoking cessation
    program rate their self-efficacy in resisting
    smoking in high-risk situations
  • Months later, results showed those who reported
    low self-efficacy in certain situations were more
    likely to relapse

25
Treatment
  • Which programs are the most effective at helping
    them quit permanently?
  • Recent studies have shown that multi-component or
    broad spectrum programs
  • Reducing Psychological Dependence
  • Aversive Approaches
  • Attempt to alter the environment so that smoking
    behavior is punished instead of reinforced
  • Electrical aversion (not effective)
  • Covert sensitization
  • Involves having the smoker imagine an aversive
    event such as throwing up, each time he/she takes
    a puff (not effective)

26
Treatment
  • Reducing Psychological Dependence
  • Aversive Procedures
  • When ones desire for something is satiated,
    continued exposure to that stimulus becomes
    punishing
  • In 1970s, rapid smoking tx involved having
    smokers sit in a closed room and take a puff
    every 6 seconds until they could smoke no more
  • Relatively effective at producing long-term
    abstinence, it is rarely used in practice because
    of the side effects
  • Focused smoking
  • Smoke at a normal rate while instructed by
    therapist to concentrate on negative sensations
    associated with smoking
  • Is no more risky than regular smoking, and while
    it was found to be effective in earlier studies,
    it hasnt been replicated
  • Smoke holding
  • Smoke is held in mouth, and one concentrates on
    negative sensation (bad taste, irritated mouth)
    showed good efficacy

27
Treatment
  • Reducing Psychological Dependence
  • Controlled Smoking
  • If they wont quit, help them reduce their intake
    by helping them to learn to control
  • Rate of smoking
  • Nicotine content of cigarette
  • Frequency of puffs, depth of inhalation
  • Puff duration
  • Amount of cigarette smoked
  • Fairly effective in not increasing their rate of
    smoking or exposure to nicotine or carbon
    monoxide
  • However, there is a tendency for smokers of
    low-nicotine cigarettes to take more frequent
    puffs to maintain former nicotine intake

28
Reducing Physiological Dependence
  • Nicotine Fading (tapering)
  • Smokers shift to brands of cigs w/ progressively
    lower levels of nicotine decrease of cigs
  • When nicotine intake is reduced, a milder
    withdrawal response is expected
  • If the smoker is unable to stop, then he/she will
    be prepared to achieve controlled smoking
  • Evidence suggests that alone, nicotine fading has
    minor effect on cessation

29
Reducing Physiological Dependence
  • Nicotine Replacement
  • Drugs mimic an effect of nicotine responsible for
    maintaining tobacco use treat physio addiction
  • Unlike cigs, gum does not contain noxious tars
    gases that have severe health consequences
  • Gum is used only during the first 3-6 months
    after cessation, and then the gum is withdrawn
  • B/c it takes 20-30 minutes to reach peak nicotine
    levels in blood after chewing gum as opposed to 7
    seconds for cigs, w/drawal from gum isnt
    difficult
  • gum is ineffective if not combined with other
    behavioral treatment

30
Maintenance or Relapse
  • 90 cessation w/ aversive smoking technique
  • misleading since relapse is a problem
  • Booster sessions do not appear to be effective
  • Social support CBT relapse prevention
  • Social support in environment is consistently
    found to predict success of smoking cessation
  • CBT program includes
  • identifying high risk situations, practicing
    coping strategies, avoid turning slips into
    relapses, incorporating pleasant activities, and
    self rewards
  • Fared better than an unstructured discussion
    group
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