Health Psychology- Chapter 17
Bad Healthism
"Medicalization of everyday life"; Mass hysteria or obsession; Reduction in spontaneity; Social control; Social exclusion; Stigma
3 Pillars of Health Promotion
1-Good Governance 2- Healthy Cities 3- Health Literacy
Healthism
Belief system that sees health as the property and responsibility of the individual and ranks the personal pursuit of health above anything else
Social Exclusion
Ignores impact of poverty, oppression, war, violence, luck, historical atrocities, abuse, and the environment
HealthyPeople.gov
A national effort that sets goals and objectives to improve the health and well-being of people in the United States
Community Development Approach
Aim: Addressing socioeconomic and environmental determinants of health
Behavior Change Approach
Aim: Bring about changes in individual behavior through changes in cognitions Assumption 1: Humans are rational decision makers Method: Information about risks and benefits Assumption 2: Patients are empowered to make informed choices
Health Promotion
Any event, process, or activity that facilitates the protection or improvement of the health status of individuals, groups, communities, or populations
Health Models
Assumption: Better behavioral prediction results in a better health promotion Challenge: "Intention-behavior" gap
Critiques of Community Development Approach
Conflict with interest in status quo; "Professionalism creep"; Burn out; Feeling "used or over-researched"; Obscures diversity; Limited measurable outcomes; Cannot conduct RCT
Re-orienting Health Services to Promotion
Connected or interlinked with physical, social, political, and economic environments; Health services fulfill the needs and demands of communities; Holistic approach
Community Action
Empowerment of communities through community participation, involvement, and engagement; Strengthening public participation
Ottawa Charter
Factors of this would be Healthy public policies, Supportive physical environments, Community actions, Personal Skills, and Re-orienting health services to promotion
Personal Skills
Information, education, and enhancement of life skills, Teach people to prepare themselves to cope up with health events
Healthy Public Policies
Legislation, fiscal measures, taxation, and organizational change; Identification and removal of objects
Good Healthism
Open promotion of self-care (nutrition, exercise, yoga) creates shared values that benefit individual communities; Free market healthy lifestyle capitalism breeds "good and responsible citizens" and supports economy
Evaluation of Health Promotion
Outcome: Assessment of changes over time Process: How, why, and for whom the intervention worked
Ottawa Charter Prerequisites for Health
Peace, Shelter, Education, Food, Income, Stable eco-system, Sustainable resources, Social justice, and Equity
Objective of Health Promotion
Prolong life and improve quality of life
Supportive Physical Environments
Protection and maintenance of both natural and built environment; Preservation of natural resources
Social Control
Protects the status quo; leads to victim blaming and privilege; Increases inequalities; Fosters internalized oppression
Re-Aim Framework
Reach: Participants Effectiveness/Efficacy: Impact Adaption: Settings and Staff Implementation: Fidelity Maintenance: Follow-up
Fear Tactics
Risk of harming audiences who did not consent and are unable to withdraw; Moral judgement on behavior; Self-fulfilling prophecy of labelling; Reluctance to seek advice; Fatalism
Critiques of Behavior Change Approach
Unable to target major causes; Top-down incompatible with community norms and/or disempowering; Only applies to cognitively mediated health behavior; Ignores impulse and emotion; Assumes same variables are universally relevant; Outcomes no different from those without theoretical basis