Chapter 1: Introducing Health Psychology
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Three Main Questions
- This chapter focuses on three basic questions:
- How have views of health changed?
- First you need to examine how disease and death have changed
- How did psychology become involved in health care?
- What type of training do health psychologists receive, and what kinds of work do they do?
Overview
- Changing Pattern of Disease and Death
- Leading cause of death in the 1900s: Infectious diseases
- Caused by
- Poor sanitation
- Contaminated food
- Close contact with sick people without E
- Lack of vaccines
- Thought contracting and spreading disease was out of control
- Causes of death in the 1900s

- Leading cause of death in the 2000s : Chronic diseases
- Changed because of new vaccines treatments and protocols
- Chronic disease - a long lasting, or recurrent, disease
- Examples - heart disease, cancer, stroke
- Currently the leading cause of mortality in the US
- 50% of all deaths in the U.S.
- Most deaths attributable to diseases associated with lifestyle and behavior
- Cigarette smoking
- Fewer now than in the past
- Alcohol Abuse
- Stress
- Lack of exercise
- Unhealthy eating
- Have a lot of control over their health but they don't exercise this control
- Adherence impacts level and frequency of disease
- Causes of death in 2013

- COVID
- May eventually be reported as a leading cause of death in the US
- Where it ranks won't be finalized for a while since COVID 19 is ever changing
- Hence data will continue changing
- Important to use current, reliable and unbiased sources (CDC or peer reviewed articles
- Impacted by other factors related to mortality
- Factors Related to Mortality
- Age
- How age relates to mortality:
- Older people are more likely to die than younger people
- Differential causes of death based on age
- Unintentional injuries are leading cause of death for those under 44 years
- Chronic diseases are leading cause of death for those 45-64 years old
- Ethnicity
- How ethnicity relates to mortality:
- Leading causes of death vary among ethnicities
- #1 cause of death for European and African Americans is heart disease
- Life expectancy for Europeans is shorter in other countries, but relatively higher in the US
- Due to lower SES for African Americans and Hispanic Americans
- Lower access to resources (such as education and higher poverty
- More health problems
- #1 cause of death for Asian and Hispanic Americans is cancer

- Income
- How poverty relates to mortality:
- Limited access to health insurance and medical care
- Risks associated with poverty begin even before birth
- Poor mothers more likely to have low-birth weight babies, be survivors of prenatal abuse, and have increasing infant mortality rates
- Education level
- How education relates to mortality:
- Those who have been to college have lower death rates than those who have not
- Higher educated people report
- Better jobs, higher incomes, better access to health care, fewer daily health symptoms, less stress, healthier habits
- Relationship between health and ethnicity are intertwined with the relationship between health, income, education and social class
Overview
- Changes in Life Expectancy
- Changes in Life Expectancy
- In 1900, life expectancy was 47.3 years
- Current life expectancy is about 79 years
- Women tend to live longer than men

- Factors that contributed to increase in life expectancy
- Advances in medical care
- Relatively minor compared to other factors
- #1 factor – decrease in infant mortality
- When infants die before their first birthday, it lowers life expectancy more than older individuals
- Because of how averages work
- Other factors – disease prevention, vaccinations, safer drinking water, better nutrition, healthier lifestyle, more efficient disposal of sewage
- Escalating Cost of Medical Care
- In the US, medical costs have increased much faster than inflation
- Increased life expectancy means people live longer, which means that they suffer the health issues that come with living longer
- People who have chronic diseases tend to require expensive and extensive medical treatments
- Defining Health
- What is Health?
- Traditional view of health is the biomedical model
- Views health as the absence of disease
- A disease is a biological process that results from exposure to a pathogen
- Leaded to treatment focused on removing the pathogen
- Works well for infectious disease but not chronic
- A Virus Doesn’t Always Lead to a Cold
- Sheldon Cohen’s research on colds
- Participants receive a cold virus and then are quarantined
- Not all participants develop a cold
- According to biomedical model they should have
- Those who do develop a cold are more likely to have had a stressful experience, experience fewer positive emotions, be less sociable, and have less diverse social networks than who do not develop a cold
- Exposure interacts with psychological and social factors to produce illness (leads into biopsychosocial
- Current view of health is the biopsychosocial model
- A disease results from a combination of biological, psychological, and social influences
- Incorporates the two other areas
- Views health as a positive condition

Overview
- Psychology and Health
- How did psychology become involved in health care?
- Psychology is the scientific study of behavior
- Since social and psychological factors
- Greater acceptance of the role of psychologists by the medical profession
- Not always respected
- AMA allows psychologists to bill for treating patients for physical disease
- Psychology internships in Medicare’s Graduate Medical Education Program
- APA and WHO developed a diagnostic system for biopsychosocial disorders
- Expanded roles for Psychologists in medical settings
- Treatment of mental health problems
- Developing and delivering programs to help with smoking cessation, eating habits, exercise, medical advice adherence, stress reduction, pain management, ways to live with chronic disease and avoid unintentional injuries
- Health Psychology
- The interrelated disciplines of health psych and behavioral medicine emerged from the psychosomatic medicine movement
- Early iterations of the idea that psychological factors can contribute to physical symptoms
- Recognized by the APA as a official subfield or branch of psychology in 1978
- Branch of psychology that concerns individual behaviors and lifestyles affecting a person’s physical health
- application of psychological principles to physical health (managing stress, controlling cholesterol, encouraging healthy behaviors like exercise
- helps identify conditions:
- affect health
- diagnose & treat chronic diseases
- modify behavioral factors in psychological & physiological rehabilitation
- The biopsychosocial model
- To identify manage, modify, prevent, promote and treat health behaviors
- Only biological factors contribute directly to physical factors and disease
- But sociology and psychology can affect biological processes and each other and have an indirect impact on outcomes
- Goal of health psych is to identify pathways by which psychology and sociology affect biology and related outcomes that determine where a person falls on the health spectrum
- The Profession of Health Psychology
- What training do health psychologists receive?
- Graduate training in psychology
- Minimum requirement
- But will likely work under the supervision of a pHD level or licensed professional
- Some train in subspecialties
- Some receive it during doctoral others during post doctoral
- Years
- Bachelors, about 4 years
- Masters, about 2 years
- phD, about 3 years
- Post doc, about 2 years
- Total of about 11 years of schooling
- Special courses and training in health
- Pursuing a Career in Health Psychology
- What jobs can health psychologists do?
- Depends largely on level of training
- Health research, in university or government agency settings
- Hospitals or clinics
- Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs)
- Private practice
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