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Samenvatting - Psychology of Prevention and Health Promotion: Determinants of beahvior and behavior change (B-KUL-P0W86A)

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Psychology of prevention and health promotion: Determinants of behavior
and behavior change (lesson2)
More theoretical (lesson2+3)

AIMS
What are behavioral determinants?
Theories and models (=> most famous!)
Explain how theories and models of behavior influence behavior change interventions

INTRODUCTION

DEFINING HEALTH BEHAVIORS

HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY PERSPECTIVE: what are health behaviors? Different kinds!
Health behavior – Behavior aimed to Go to gym, eat healthy, not smoke, get enough
gezondheidsgedrag prevent a disease. sleep
Illness behavior – Behavior aimed to seek Go to the doctor, extra rest
ziektegedrag remedy.
Sick role behavior – Behavior is any activity Taking a prescription/ medication, wearing a cast
ziekterolgedrag aimed to get well. for a broken leg, staying home during illness (flu)

Health impairing habits/ behaviors vs Health protecting behaviors
- Some behaviors are guided by habits (not addiction), more automatic/ difficult to target;
Cf. Start the day by studying with a cup of coffee, make it a habit to have a cup next to you.
Cf. Lesson1: Noncommunicable Diseases – 4 diseases, 4 modifiable shared risk factors
Tabacco use Unhealthy diets Physical inactivity Harmful use of alcohol
Cardiovascular X X X X
Diabetes X X X X
Cancer X X X X
Chronic respiratory X


(INTERACTIONS BETWEEN) DETERMINANTS OF BEHAVIOR  Certain extent overlapping!
Biological determinants
- Metabolic traits (cf. nicotine metabolism, alcohol metabolism, hunger and satiety, reward
sensitivity,…)
- Genetics/ predisposition
Personal determinants
- Personality (cf. high reward sensitivity + impulsive => lead to addition behaviors)
- Learning history
- Attitudes, knowledge, expectations (cf. information distributed on posters in hospitals…)
• Knowledge one of the easiest targets to influence behavior
Environmental determinants
- Availability (cf. larger ability to cigarettes because of a low price, more likely to engage in smoking)
- Socio- cultural norms – family, school, peers, community (cf. socially acceptable to be a smoker)
• The norm of your social group: seen as negative or positive => has an impact.
- Financial/ economic conditions
• Higher education & better financial conditions ~ better health behavior

RISK & PROTECTIVE FACTORS (two faces of the same coin?)
Cf. resilience, skills, strengths, environmental advantages
 BOTH: individual & systemic level
Cf. Zie extra document ‘Example: the vitamin E case’.

Interactions between all these factors: complex & often non-linear
- It is not necessarily the case that when at lower or higher risk for a certain disease, the amount of
(un)healthy behaviors leads to a linear decrease/increase in risk.

, 6 THEORIES FOR BEHAVIOR CHANGE
NOTE: research has been largely non-theory-based (1/3 of 193 were theory based) ➔ problematic!

HISTORICAL EVOLUTION AND OVERVIEW




Before ‘70s In ‘70s In ‘90s Now
Environmental Personal Health Choice architecture
determinants determinants promotion
Nowadays see some Health See paper: ‘The Suggestions, reminders.. in favor of certain healthy
things as common sense education role of a doctor is behavior (cf. attractive stairs in shopping centers,
(cf. not smoke during not only to cure, reminders doctors appointment);
pregnancy), was once not but also to ‘Choice architect’: organize context in people make
so common sense. prevent’. decisions;
Nudge1.

(1) FEAR DRIVE MODEL (along with naïve and common sense approaches)
= producing excessively frightening messages to preventively reduce behavior.
= common sense, implicit, folk, naïve theories
Inform/ educate: Fear appeals (cf. images on Disgust Repression Shame
important, not enough packs of cigarettes)

Not so effective:
Repetition leads to habituation: the fear Punishment/reward It is short lasting without
diminishes with exposure to it repetition
Work on knowledge, and negative feelings Fear might not evoke Effects of lifestyle changes
(which are short-term and not enough for a change in behavior are not obvious and certain
long-term change)

(2) (SOCIAL) COGNITIVE THEORY (SCT)
Cognitive models: derived from subjective expected utility theory
- People will wight potential costs and benefits for the behavior;
- Emphasize the role of individual cognitions rather than the social context.
• Decides for themselves, social context is ignored (does not matter).

Cognitive (and social cognitive) models: change focus on attitudes/ beliefs
- Beliefs about risk and efficacy: offering knowledge to change beliefs
- Beliefs about personal control: cf. excessive optimism
- Social beliefs: cf. perceived social norm

Beliefs about risk: the perception of risk is a crucial element
- Risk perception would be best approximated by experts (i.o.w.: ‘trust me’) cf. Covid: vaccinate…
- Several biases: - not completely rational thinkers cf. I smoke 2 packs of cigarettes a day and still
haven't died, just like my father who is still alive.
• Unrealistic optimism: 1) Lack personal experience, 2) Egocentric perspective: belief,
problem preventable by individual action, 3) Belief, if the problem has never appeared, it
won’t, 4) Belief, problem is infrequent
• Availability of info: In your context nothing happened, but you have to look it on a bigger scale
• Personal experience with the problem
• How the risk is framed


1
Nudge= any aspect of the choice architecture that alters people’s behavior in a predictable way without forbidding
opinions of changing economic incentives.
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Hoi! Ik verkoop graag wat van mijn samenvattingen op Stuvia! Ik ben een schakel-/ masterstudent psychologie aan de KUL. Hiervoor heb ik toegepaste psychologie gestudeerd. Neem zeker ook een kijkje naar de voordeelbundels! Indien er iets onduidelijk is, er uitzonderlijk iets zou ontbreken, of je ergens over twijfelt, aarzel dan niet om me een bericht te sturen. Ik help je graag zo snel mogelijk verder (op voorwaarde dat de samenvatting niet langer dan twee jaar geleden is). Veel succes!

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