EXAM 2 - Stress and Physical Health Flashcards

1
Q

Behavioral medicine:

A

Knowledge derived from behavioral science is applied to prevention, diagnosis and treatment of medical problems

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2
Q

Health psychology:

A

Study of psychological factors that promote and maintain health as well as health care systems and health policy

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3
Q

Stress

A

A challenging event that requires physiological, cognitive, or behavioral adaptation.

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4
Q

Health and Health-Related Behavior

A
50% of the leading causes of death in the U.S. are linked to behavioral / lifestyle patterns
Smoking
Poor eating habits
Lack of exercise
Insufficient injury control
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5
Q

Psychological and Social Factors ThatInfluence Health

A

Psychological, behavioral, and social factors contribute to etiology and maintenance of medical disorders
Two primary paths
Psychological factors influence biological processes
Behavior patterns increase disease risk

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6
Q

Psychological Factors: Folkman and Lazarus’s Model of Stress and Coping

A

Stressors combined with our cognitive and behavioral responses determine outcome
Primary Appraisal is the cognitive evaluation of challenge, threat, or harm
Secondary Appraisal is the cognitive evaluation of one’s abilities and resources for coping
Coping Actions are behavior responses (ex., problem-focused, emotion-focused, avoidance)

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7
Q

Stress and Stress Response

A

Nature of stress: Increases vulnerability for developing physical and mental health problems

General Adaptation Syndrome (GAS): theory of stress response
Phase 1 – Alarm response
Phase 2 – Resistance: attempt to cope with stress
Phase 3 – Exhaustion: body suffers damage

Chronic stress will damage the fight or flight response
Stress will activate the sympathetic nervous system and result in a variety of physical problems if stress is chronic.
Chronic stress can impact health (e.g., blood pressure; heart rate; headaches; stomachaches)
Psychological and social factors can determine whether potential stressors are stressors and mitigate the impact on our physiology

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8
Q

The Physiology of Stress

A

Stress activates the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) axis
The Hypothalamus releases corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) and stimulates the pituitary gland
The Pituitary gland activates the adrenal gland, secreting cortisol (stress hormone)
Ordinarily the hippocampus turns off the stress response, but can be damaged by excessive or chronic stress

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9
Q

Physiological Reactions to Stress and the Immune System

A

Immune system function
Identify and eliminate foreign materials (antigens)
Two parts: humoral and cellular
Includes white blood cells (leukocytes), B and T cells (lymphocytes), macrophages
Overreactive immune system may attack body’s own cells
Stress effects the immune system (Psychoneuroimmunology—PNI)
Glucocorticoids are adrenal hormones secreted under stress
Glucocorticoids inhibit or destroy T Cells (Lymphocytes) that combat infection (antigens)

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10
Q

Physiological Reactions to Stress

A

Thus, stress may make you more susceptible to disease; however, psychological and social factors can buffer the impact of stress on health.
Research confirms that coping well with stress may increase immune system function (e.g., extending the lives of women with breast cancer)
Likewise, coping poorly with stress impacts physiology in multiple ways and can exacerbate health problems or trigger them (e.g., denial in some cases; avoidant coping)
Some chronic psychological factors can make people vulnerable to health problems (depression; anxiety)

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11
Q

Psychological Factors Affecting Other Medical Conditions (DSM-5)

A

These have also been referred to as Psychophysiological Disorders
There is a known physical disorder that is exacerbated by psychological factors.
Examples: Ulcers, Headaches, Asthma, Hypertension, Coronary Heart Disease, Pain, Cancer

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12
Q

One Example: Coronary Heart Disease

A

Risk Factors
Medical Conditions: Hypertension, Genetics
Behavior: Smoking, fatty diet, overweight, alcohol consumption, lack of exercise, personality
Personality Types (Type A)
CHD has been linked to Type A behavior pattern
Anger
Excessive drive and competitiveness
Impatience
Accelerated speech
Agitated motor activity
CHD also linked to chronic negative affect, low SES and stressful experiences

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13
Q

Interventions for CHD

A

Cognitive-Behavioral interventions are effective and include the following:
Exercise training
Alter Type A thinking and behavior patterns
Role playing
Cognitive therapy to alter beliefs/thinking and develop more realistic goals
Stress Management

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14
Q

Comprehensive Stress- and Pain-Reduction Program for medical Conditions affected by Psychological Factors

A
Monitor and identify stressful events
Times, intensity, triggers
Monitor somatic symptoms
Muscle relaxation
Cognitive therapy
Increase coping strategies
Time management
Assertiveness training
More effective than individual components
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15
Q

Specific components of Treatment

A

Relaxation and meditation
Progressive muscle relaxation
Transcendental meditation (TM) focuses attention on a repeated mantra
Increased sense of control and mastery
May improve headache, hypertension, acute and chronic pain

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16
Q

Modifying Behaviors to Promote Health

A

Injury prevention
Accidents are a leading cause of death from ages 1-45
Programmatic efforts needed
Example: Successful programs have taught children how to escape fires and cross streets
Modifying health impairing behaviors
Smoking Cessation treatment
Exercise groups