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How do people change?

How do people change?. Robert West University College London. Outline. What is behaviour change? What can change? Pathways to change Mechanisms of change Dynamics of change Transtheoretical model A better model Example of smoking. What is ‘behaviour change’?.

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How do people change?

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  1. How do people change? Robert West University College London

  2. Outline • What is behaviour change? • What can change? • Pathways to change • Mechanisms of change • Dynamics of change • Transtheoretical model • A better model • Example of smoking

  3. What is ‘behaviour change’? • Behaviour patterns are characteristic ways of responding to situations and events • Behaviour change is a change in those ways of responding • It can occur as a result of change to: • the situations and events to which the individual is exposed • the way that the individual responds

  4. What can change? • ‘External’ change in the environment • cues and reminders • opportunity • models • ‘Internal’ change in the individual • plans • beliefs • desires • habits • emotions • capabilities

  5. The structure of human motivation Response generation systems Primitive, inflexible Level 1: Instinctive and habit learning mechanisms Impulse/inhibition generation systems Level 2: Feelings attached to mental representations of possible futures Motive generation systems Level 3: Increasing flexibility and complexity Evaluation generation systems Generates beliefs Level 4: Plan generation and enactment systems Allows greatest flexibility and anticipation Level 5:

  6. Pathways to internal change • Deliberate • a decision is made to make a change • this leads to changes to motivation • Unconsidered • change occurs without a conscious decision to do so

  7. Deliberate change • Self-conscious intention to behave differently • Creates new desires that: • compete with existing desires and habits • can changes existing desires • can involve other behaviours that facilitate the change

  8. Non-deliberate change • Habituation-sensitisation • emotional responses to events decrease or increase with continued or repeated exposure • Associative learning • emotional responses to events or situations are altered by their association with other events or situations • Cognitive adjustment • levels of attraction are changed through inference, communication etc.

  9. The Transtheoretical Model • 5 stages of change • precontemplation • contemplation • preparation • action • maintenance • Processes of change • different processes for each stage transition

  10. Problems with the model • Descriptively inaccurate • ‘stages’ do not exist in any meaningful sense • change process is fluid and variable • Predictively weak • ‘stage’ is a weaker predictor than • desire • intention • Barriers (e.g. dependence) • Heuristically unhelpful • interventions based on the TTM have not proved more effective than those based on other models or simple commonsense approaches • emphasis of ‘stage’ may lead to inappropriate intervention approach

  11. A more accurate model • Deliberate change involves two phases: • initiation • attempted maintenance • Initiation arises from two drivers: • momentary tension • immediate degree of dissatisfaction with current situation and hope for an improved situation • triggers • events that precipitate the decision to change • Initiation takes two forms: • immediate change • intention to change

  12. Attempted maintenance • Involves two channels • behaviour • the behaviour may conform more or less closely to the new identity • identity • the new identity may involve different degrees of: • coherence • commitment • specificity

  13. Behaviour maintenance • Momentary balance of competing motivations given cues and opportunity • old instincts, old habits, old desires, old beliefs • versus • new identity-driven desire, new beliefs, new habits etc. • Higher-level motivations require more mental mental energy

  14. The importance of identity change • Identity change is the basis for the desire to inhibit the old behaviour or engage in the new behaviour • Commitment to a coherent, specific new identity is essential to maintain behaviour change unless other changes take places to desires, habits etc. that will sustain the new behaviour

  15. Lasting behaviour change • Lasting behaviour change requires minimal self-regulatory effort • reduction in old habits, old desires etc. • development of new habits, new desires etc. • changes to environment that minimise exposure to cues and opportunities that rekindle old habits, old desires etc. or maintain new ones

  16. Initiation of smoking cessation • Drivers of initiation • Tension • concern about health, cost etc. • Triggers • momentary increases in concern caused by illness, price rise, inconvenience • Form of initiation • 50% of decision are put into effect immediately

  17. Maintenance of smoking cessation • Attempts at maintenance • Behaviour • lapses caused by anticipated pleasure or relief of craving or discomfort in presence of cues or reminders overwhelming desire arising from new identity • Identity • observation that lapses are inconsistent with non-smoker identity results in reversion to smoker identity

  18. Lasting maintenance • No longer finds smoking attractive • Extinction of cues driven urges • Competing behaviours have greater priority • Environment is no longer conducive to old behaviour or is conducive to new one • Fixed barrier around the behaviour

  19. Conclusions • Model of behaviours change needs to: • diversity of pathways • responsiveness to immediate situation • the importance of identity change • importance of desire and habit

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