Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Stress,
Coping,
Health
- Stress & Disease
- Contagious diseases
were at one time the
largest cause of death.
Now chronic diseases,
like heart disease,
cancer and stroke
make up 55% of the
reason for death.
- Biopsychosocial model
–physical illness is caused by
a complex interaction of
biological, psychological,
and sociocultural factors.
- Health psychology –studies how
psychosocial factors relate to the
promotion and maintenance of
health and with the cause,
prevention and treatment of
illness.
- Stress - occurs when
circumstances threaten or are
perceived to threaten one’s
well-being and tax one’s coping
abilities.
- Primary appraisal is one’s first evaluation of whether
an event is 1) irrelevant, 2) relevant but not
threatening, or 3) stressful.
- Secondary appraisal is made when one views
the event as stressful and evaluate one’s
coping resources and options for dealing
with it.
- Types of Stress
- 1. Acute vs. Chronic – Acute stressors are short and
have a clear end point (e.g. exam) whereas chronic
stressors are relatively long and don’t have an end
time limit
- 2. Frustration – occurs when one’s
goals are blocked.
- 3. Internal Conflict – two or more
incompatible motivations or
behavioural impulses Kurt Lewin’s
types are 1) approach-approach - 2)
approach-avoidance - 3)
avoidance-avoidance -
- 4. Change – having to adapt
- 5. Pressure – time pressure as well
as expectations to behave in certain
ways
- Responding to Stress
- Emotional Responses Common
emotional responses - Annoyance,
anger, rage - Apprehension, anxiety,
fear - Dejection, sadness, grief
- Fight-or-flight response (Walter Cannon,
1932) physiological response to threat in
which the autonomic nervous system
mobilizes one for attacking (fight) or
escaping (flight) the attacker.
- Coping – active efforts to master, reduce or
tolerate the demands created by stress
- Psychosomatic diseases – term was once used
when a physical problem (e.g. ulcers) was
believed to be caused by stress.
- Selye’s General Adaptation Syndrome
- 1. Alarm - Physiological arousal occurs when the organism first recognizes threat.
- 2. Resistance – if stress is prolonged chronic arousal can result.
- 3. Exhaustion – resources are depleted, arousal
decreases and animal collapses or has little
resistance to diseases.
- Type A Personality, Hostility, and Heart disease
- Type A Behaviour - 3 elements 1. strong
competitiveness 2. impatience and time urgency
3. anger and hostility
- Type B – relaxed, patient, easygoing, not competitive or easily angered
- Stress and immune functioning
- Immune response – body’s defensive reaction
to invasion by bacteria, viruses, etc. Stress is
associated with reduced immune activity