Theory of Planned Behavior
How to enhance personal control
Allow for individual input in designing health behavior interventions Educate individuals on overcoming health behavior barriers
Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB)
Attitude, subjective norms, and PBC (perceived behavioral control) combine to influence intention
Perceived Behavioral Control
Degree of personal control an individual perceives they have over performance of a behavior Beliefs a person has that will help or hinder performance of the behavior Takes into account internal and external control factors and barriers Not to be confused with self-efficacy
Examples of behavior not under voluntary control
Getting 8 hours of sleep because roommates are noisy Avoiding second hand smoke -- family members smoke in the house Eating low sodium foods -- mom shops and cooks
To make TRA more useful another construct was added
Perceived behavioral control -- and the theory was revised to the Theory of Planned Behavior
TPB Application
Strong sense of personal control (PBC) over behavior is essential for adherence
How TPB is different than TRA
TPB adds in perceived behavioral control (how much control you have on what you can do)
TRA: Intention not ideal construct for predicting behaviors that are
continuing or repeatable
Intention and PBC are
equally influential predictors of behavior
PBC influences behavior
independently and through intention
Attitude and subjective norms influences behavior only through
intention