100% tevredenheidsgarantie Direct beschikbaar na je betaling Lees online óf als PDF Geen vaste maandelijkse kosten 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Samenvatting

Summary lectures Topic Health Communication

Beoordeling
3,6
(5)
Verkocht
43
Pagina's
19
Geüpload op
25-06-2018
Geschreven in
2017/2018

Summary of all the lectures. All important literature explained with the given information from the lectures. Guest lecture excluded because not mandatory for the exam.











Oeps! We kunnen je document nu niet laden. Probeer het nog eens of neem contact op met support.

Documentinformatie

Geüpload op
25 juni 2018
Aantal pagina's
19
Geschreven in
2017/2018
Type
Samenvatting

Voorbeeld van de inhoud

Summary lectures topic health communication: from theory to practice
Lecture 1: Theories of planned behaviour
Health communication
- Increased number chronic diseases
- Health behaviour important predictor
- Health behaviour in need of change because people don’t exercise, smoke, drink and
eat unhealthy food
Theory
- Set of statements about relationship between tow or more concepts or constructs
- Concept/constructs are the building blocks of understanding
o Generalized abstraction
o Learned
o Functional

Explanation and prediction
- Prediction → predict that something is going to happen in the future on the basis of
pre-happenings → not necessarily understanding why things happen
- Explanation → more specific understanding
- Understanding in scientific sense→ identify, describe, predict and explain
Scientific approach→ conceptual constructs bring empirical reality together
- Conceptual realm → concepts and their relations
- Empirical realm → concept and relation assessed in guided approach
- Theoretical propositions subjected empirical test
Good theory
1. Utility
2. Acceptance by multiple scientists
3. Consistent with other theories
4. Range of theory
5. Creativity
- In need data for trying to confirm the propositions
Why is theory useful
- Why do or don’t people take action
- Explain behaviour and suggest how to change it
- Pinpoint what you need to know before developing programs
o How to shape effective programs
- What should be monitored and measured & compared in evaluation



1

,Causality
- Causality for indicating changes → x is cause of y if changes in x produce changes in
y
- Discussed because causality is hard to proof but useful for thinking about the world
- Identify systematic relationships between variables
- Causal thinking→ therapy for health-related problems
Types of relations between concepts
1. Direct causal relationship
o Given cause (x) direct causal effect on outcome variable (y)
o E.g. parental communication on smoking behaviour
2. Mediated (indirect) causal relationship
o Variable (x) influences another variable (y) indirect through intermediary
variable (z)
o Z is mediator → work through to influence the outcome
o How come x is related to y
o E.g. Tv exposure indirectly related to being overweight because tv exposure
directly related to eating snacks
3. Moderated causal relationship
o Causal relationship between two variables differs depending on value third
variable
o Outcome can explain for one specific value of third variable
o Under which circumstances does x influence y
o E.g. medication influences decrease of headache but only for women
4. Spurious causal relationship
o Relationship between variables because of sharing common cause not because
one influences the other
o E.g. shoe size and verbality →actually explained by age
o Use statistics for finding the spurious relations

Specifying conceptual definitions
- Literature and dictionaries
- TACT→ key properties construct
1. Target → who
2. Action → what
3. Context → where
4. Time → when
Theory of reasoned action (Fishbein)
- Understanding people’s decisions in health behaviour must consider:
o Attitude → expectancies advantages and disadvantages
o Subjective norm → normative pressure

2

, o These will tell us why people behave in a certain way
- Intention is the best predictor for behaviour
o Sometimes used for measuring behaviour
- Attitudes and subjective norm predict intention and therefore behaviour
o Attitude → what do you expect
 Behavioural beliefs → what are disadvantages and advantages
 Behavioural outcomes → importance of disadvantages and advantages
o Subjective norm→ is behaviour compliant or does it matter
 Normative beliefs→ what others tell you what’s good or bad
 Motivation to comply → what you feel you should do
- These single constructs make sets of constructs
- Mediated relationship
Theory of planned behaviour (Ajzen)
- Adding value to the theory of reasoned action → not only attitude but also perceived
control
o Attitude → what do you expect
 Behavioural beliefs → what are disadvantages and advantages
 Behavioural outcomes → importance of disadvantages and advantages
o Subjective norm→ is behaviour compliant or does it matter
 Normative beliefs→ what others tell you what’s good or bad
 Motivation to comply → what you feel you should do
o Perceived control → perceptions of ability to perform behaviour
 Control beliefs→ belief of existence of factor that will influence the
behaviour
 Perceived power → how capable am I to perform the behaviour
- Perceived control also moderates the relation between intention and behaviour
Measurement
- Translating theory into empirical data
- Behaviour → 1-9 scale with endpoints
- Attitude → semantic differential (adjective pairs)
- Intention → 1-7 scale with statements
- Subjective norm → 1-9 scale with endpoints
- Perceived behavioural control → opposites with 1-7 scale
- Behavioural strength → 1-7 scale with statements
- Normative beliefs → 1-7 scale with statements
- Motivation to comply → 1-7 scale with statements
- Control beliefs → 1-7 scale with statements
- Consider what you want to measure and make the right statements, pairs and questions
→ all sorts of scales are useful as long you can explain your choice of measurement
Many health-related studies

3
€3,99
Krijg toegang tot het volledige document:
Gekocht door 43 studenten

100% tevredenheidsgarantie
Direct beschikbaar na je betaling
Lees online óf als PDF
Geen vaste maandelijkse kosten

Beoordelingen van geverifieerde kopers

Alle 5 reviews worden weergegeven
5 jaar geleden

5 jaar geleden

6 jaar geleden

6 jaar geleden

7 jaar geleden

3,6

5 beoordelingen

5
1
4
2
3
1
2
1
1
0
Betrouwbare reviews op Stuvia

Alle beoordelingen zijn geschreven door echte Stuvia-gebruikers na geverifieerde aankopen.

Maak kennis met de verkoper

Seller avatar
De reputatie van een verkoper is gebaseerd op het aantal documenten dat iemand tegen betaling verkocht heeft en de beoordelingen die voor die items ontvangen zijn. Er zijn drie niveau’s te onderscheiden: brons, zilver en goud. Hoe beter de reputatie, hoe meer de kwaliteit van zijn of haar werk te vertrouwen is.
AmberdeGroot Universiteit van Amsterdam
Bekijk profiel
Volgen Je moet ingelogd zijn om studenten of vakken te kunnen volgen
Verkocht
106
Lid sinds
8 jaar
Aantal volgers
74
Documenten
33
Laatst verkocht
1 jaar geleden

3,4

13 beoordelingen

5
1
4
6
3
4
2
1
1
1

Recent door jou bekeken

Waarom studenten kiezen voor Stuvia

Gemaakt door medestudenten, geverifieerd door reviews

Kwaliteit die je kunt vertrouwen: geschreven door studenten die slaagden en beoordeeld door anderen die dit document gebruikten.

Niet tevreden? Kies een ander document

Geen zorgen! Je kunt voor hetzelfde geld direct een ander document kiezen dat beter past bij wat je zoekt.

Betaal zoals je wilt, start meteen met leren

Geen abonnement, geen verplichtingen. Betaal zoals je gewend bent via iDeal of creditcard en download je PDF-document meteen.

Student with book image

“Gekocht, gedownload en geslaagd. Zo makkelijk kan het dus zijn.”

Alisha Student

Veelgestelde vragen