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Stress, Health, and Coping

Stress, Health, and Coping. A negative emotional state in response to events that we perceive as taxing our resources or our ability to cope Stressors—events that are perceived as harmful, threatening, or challenging. Stress.

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Stress, Health, and Coping

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  1. Stress, Health, and Coping

  2. A negative emotional state in responseto events that we perceive as taxing our resources or our ability to cope Stressors—events that are perceived as harmful, threatening, or challenging Stress

  3. Lifestyle Diseases: Diseases related to health-damaging personal habits Behavioral Risk Factors: Behaviors that increase the chances of disease, injury, or premature death Behavioral Risk Factors

  4. Life styles Risks

  5. Teaches stress reduction, self-protection, decision making, self-control, and social skills Life Skills Training:

  6. Sharing drug needles and syringes • Anal sex, with or without a condom • Unprotected sex (without a condom) with an infected partner • Sex with someone you know who has several partners • Vaginal or oral sex with an intravenous drug user • Having many sex partners Sexually Transmitted Disease (STD)

  7. Not having sex Not injecting drugs Using a condom Sex with one mutually faithful, uninfected partner Not engaging in sex while intoxicated Reducing the number of sex partners Safer Sex Practices

  8. Pull between two opposing desires or goals • Approach-approach conflict • choice between 2 appealing outcomes • easy to resolve, low stress • Avoidance-avoidance conflict • choice between 2 unappealing outcomes • more stressful than approach-approach • Approach-avoidance conflict • one goal with appealing & unappealing aspects • most stressful type of conflict • often see vacillation Conflict Source of Stress

  9. Feelings of tension, uneasiness, apprehension, worry, and vulnerability • We are motivated to avoid experiencing anxiety Anxiety

  10. Defense Mechanisms: Habitual and unconscious (in most cases) psychological processes designed to reduce anxiety Freudian Defense Mechanisms

  11. Work by avoiding, denying, or distorting sources of threat or anxiety If used short term, can help us get through everyday situations If used long term, we may end up not living in reality Protect idealized self-image so we can live with ourselves More on Defense Mechanisms

  12. Denial: Most primitive; denying reality; usually occurs with death and illness Repression: When painful memories, anxieties, and so on are held out of our awareness Reaction Formation: Impulses are repressed and the opposite behavior is exaggerated Freudian Defense Mechanisms: Some Examples

  13. Projection: When one’s own feelings, shortcomings, or unacceptable traits and impulses are seen in others; exaggerating negative traits in others lowers anxiety Rationalization: Justifying personal actions by giving “rational” but false reasons for them More Defense Mechanisms

  14. Acquired (learned) inability to overcome obstacles and avoid aversive stimuli; learned passivity and inaction to aversive stimuli • Occurs when events appear to be uncontrollable • May feel helpless if failure is attributed to lasting, general factors Learned Helplessness (Seligman)

  15. State of feeling despondent defined by feelings of powerlessness and hopelessness • One of the most common mental problems in the world • Some symptoms: Loss of appetite or sex drive, decreased activity, sleeping too much Depression

  16. Social conditions that promote stress • poverty, racism, crime • low SES tend to have highest levels of stress • Culture clashes lead to stress • company owned by different culture • refugees, immigrants suffer • acculturative stress Social and Cultural Sources of Stress

  17. Indirect effects—promote behaviors that jeopardize physical well being such as use of drugs, lack of sleep, poor concentration Direct effects—promote changes in body functions, leading to illness such as headaches and other physical symptoms Health Effects of Stress

  18. Psychological Factors • Perception of control • Explanatory style • Chronic negative emotions • Hostility • Social Factors • Outside resources • Friends and family • Positive relationships Response to Stress

  19. Sense of control decreases stress, anxiety, & depression Perceptions of control must be realistic to be adaptive Perceived Control

  20. Personality type associated with superior stress resistance • Sense of personal commitment to self and family • Feel they have control over their lives • See life as a series of challenges, not threats Hardy Personality

  21. Personality type associated with poor health; person tends to be chronically depressed, anxious, and hostile Disease-Prone Personality

  22. Type A • time urgency • intense ambition and competitiveness • general hostility • associated with heart disease • Type B • more easygoing • not associated with heart disease Type A vs. type B Personality

  23. Optimism • use external, unstable, & specific explanations for negative events • predicts better health outcomes • Pessimism • use internal, stable, & global explanations for negative events • predicts worse health outcomes Explanatory style

  24. Coronary heart disease is North America’s leading cause of death Habitually grouchy people tend to have poorer health outcomes Chronic negative emotions have negative effect on immune system Stress, Personality, and Heart Disease

  25. Time urgency & competitiveness not associated with poor health outcomes Negative emotions, anger, aggressive reactivity High levels of hostility increase chance of all disease (e.g., cancer) Research on type A Personality

  26. Behavioral and cognitive responses used to deal with stressors Involves efforts to change circumstances or our interpretation of them to make them more favorable and less threatening Coping

  27. Problem-focused coping • managing or changing the stressor • use if problem seems alterable • confrontive coping • planful problem solving • Emotion-focused coping • try to feel better about situation • use if problem out of our control Coping

  28. Escape-avoidance—try to escape stressor Distancing—minimize impact of stressor Denial—refuse to acknowledge problem exists Emotion-focused Coping Strategies

  29. Wishful thinking—imagining stressor is magically gone Seeking social support—turn to friends, support people Positive reappraisal—minimize negative, emphasize positive Downward comparison—compare self to those less fortunate Emotion-Focused Coping Strategies

  30. Social support—resources provided by others in times of need Emotional—expressions of concern, empathy, positive regard Tangible—direct assistance such as lending money, providing meals Informational—such as making good suggestions, advice, good referrals Social Factors Promoting Health

  31. Improves ability to cope with stress & benefits health • person modifies appraisal of stressor’s significance to be less threatening • helps to decrease intensity of physical reactions to stress • make person less likely to experience negative emotions • Pets as social support • especially for elderly and people who live alone • Gender and social support Social Support

  32. Meditation can lower blood pressure, heart rate, oxygen consumption Can it help with stress-related disease? Relaxation

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