Stress and Health Chapter 15.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 13—Stress, Health, and Coping
Advertisements

Stress Sucks!! Learn how to cope with it!!
Psychology Review Chapter 15 STRESS.
Myers’ EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (6th Ed) Chapter 11 Emotions, Stress & Health Modified from: James A. McCubbin, PhD Clemson University Worth Publishers.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint® Lecture Slide Presentation prepared by Michael Hall 3 Managing Stress:
© 2011 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved. Chapter Three: Managing Stress.
Stress, Health, and Adjustment
Psychology: An Introduction Charles A. Morris & Albert A. Maisto © 2005 Prentice Hall Stress and Health Psychology Chapter 12.
Ch. 15 Stress and Health McElhaney. Ch 15 Key Topics ► 1. Big Picture definition and significance of stress- ► 2. Health – ► Behavior Health Risks ► Risk.
Chapter 3 Coping with Stress J. Don Chaney, Ph.D. Texas A&M University.
Conflict, Stress, and Coping. Anxiety - the feeling that something is wrong and disaster is imminent A. Typically accompanied by nervous behavior B. Not.
Chapter 11 Stress and Physical Health
AP Psychology Stress and Coping. Health Psychology Looks at the relationship between psychological behavior (thoughts, feelings, actions) and physical.
Introduction to Psychology Health, Stress and Coping
Stress & Health The interplay between mind, body and disease.
Aggression and Stress. Aggression/Anger O Does venting your anger make you less angry? O Catharsis Hypothesis: emotional release O Maintains that “releasing”
Stress and Health Ch 17 Notes. What is Stress? Arousal of one’s mind and body in response to demands made upon them Forces organisms to adapt, to cope,
Unit 6 – Adjustment and Breakdown
Cherokee 2011  Refusal Skills Training: Program that teaches young people how to resist pressures to begin smoking  Life Skills Training: Teaches.
Stress 4X8_c80kg Stress and anxiety is estimated to affect well over 19 million Americans and growing.
Health Psychology & Behavioral Medicine Health psychology Studies the relationship between psychological factors and physical health Health psychology.
Effects of Stress Module 13. Stress how we perceive & respond to events that we appraise as threatening or challenging how we perceive & respond to events.
Chapter 14 Stress and Illness. Stress and Health Stress is a risk factor for the development of disease Stress may aggravate an existing disease or interfere.
Stress, Frustration, & Defense Mechanisms. What is stress? Event that produces worry or tension Event that produces worry or tension Person’s physical.
Stress. A negative emotional state occurring in response to events that are perceived as taxing or exceeding a person’s resources or ability to cope.
What do these things have in common? August 2007 Chronic neck pain March 2011 Vertigo Hashimoto’s Disease Lupus STRESS & ME!!!
Chapter 14 Stress and Stressors. The Concept of Stress Stress A physical and psychological response to events (stressors) that challenge a persons normal.
Stress. –Is the process by which we appraise and respond to environmental threats –Hans Selye believed we react similarly to physical and psychological.
STRESS: THE CONSTANT CHALLENGE Chapter Two. What is Stress?  Stress = 1) Situations that trigger physical and emotional reactions and 2) The reactions.
Stress and Health Chapter 11.
© 2007 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved. Chapter 5 Stress: Managing Pressure.
Stress & Conflict. Sources of Stress  Viewed differently by researchers.  Considered an event, response or perception by various researchers  Stress.
Chapter 12 The Biology of Emotion and Stress. Stress Stressor - An event that either strains or overwhelms the ability of an organism to adjust to the.
Chapter 12: Emotions, Stress & Health. The Relationship Between Stress and Disease Contagious diseases vs. chronic diseases –Biopsychosocial model –Health.
Health Psychology & Behavioral Medicine Health psychology Studies the relationship between psychological factors and physical health Health psychology.
Ch. 12 Stress and Health Psychology. Stress Any environmental demand that creates a state of tension or threat and requires change or adaptation.
Stress, Coping and Health. What causes stress? Can be a variety of things that cause stress. There are different models that explain stress too.
Neural Circuitry, Hormones, and Synaptic Transmitters Mediate Violence and Aggression Aggression has different meanings; the primary focus here is physical.
Stress and Health. What is Stress? Psychological states cause physical illness. Stress is any circumstance (real or perceived) that threatens a person’s.
Stress and health psychology liudexiang. Overview Source of stress Coping with stress How stress affects health Staying healthy Extreme stress.
STRESS.
Psychology: An Introduction Charles A. Morris & Albert A. Maisto © 2005 Prentice Hall Stress and Health Psychology.
Mind-Body Interactions: Physical & Psychological Contributions to Health HW 280 Unit 8 Seminar.
Section 2: Reactions to Stress.   Body reacts quickly to stressor  Adrenal glands produce:  Hormones that increase blood sugar for energy  Adrenaline-
© McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All Rights Reserved. Stress Chapter Ten.
Chapter 12: Stress, Coping, and Health. The Relationship Between Stress and Disease Contagious diseases vs. chronic diseases –Biopsychosocial model –Health.
Section 3: Coping with Stress.  Cognitive appraisal- the interpretation of an event that helps determine its stress impact.
CHS AP Psychology Unit 8: Motivation, Emotion and Stress Essential Task 8.1: Discuss sources of stress (conflicts, frustration, etc.), measures of stress,
Health Psychology Stress. What is Stress? What are Stressors? Objective: Describe Stressors.
Stress: The Constant Challenge Chapter Two. ©2008 McGraw-Hill Companies. All Rights Reserved. 2 What is Stress? Stressor Physical Responses to Stressors.
Psychology - Stress. Stress It is the anxious or threatening feeling resulting from our appraisal of a situation and our reaction to demands placed upon.
Stress and Health Psychology -- Durling. 1.As a group, on the top half of your chart paper, write down events in your life that cause stress. 2.On the.
Stress and Health Chapter 9. STRESS Hans Selye: demand made on organism to adapt, cope, or adjust The rate of wear and tear within the body The anxious.
Stress & Health Chapter 17.
Stress & Conflict.
Unit 8: Motivation, Emotion and Stress
Module 43: Stress and Health
Stress Unit 2: Biopsychology.
Stress Chapter Ten.
Stress Chronic Stress by Age.
SECTION 3: COPING STRATEGIES
CHAPTER 15: STRESS AND HEALTH
Stress and Health.
Stress and Abnormal Psychology
Chapter 13: Stress, Coping, and Health
Stress and Health Chapter 14
Stress and Abnormal Psychology
Stress & Conflict.
DESCRIBING AND IMPACTS ON HEALTH
Presentation transcript:

Stress and Health Chapter 15

Sources of Stress Health psychology Studies the relationship between psychological factors and physical health Stress A state of psychological tension or strain where we respond to stressors that we appraise as threatening or challenging Stressors Events or circumstances that trigger stress Adjustment Any attempt to cope with stress What are your stressors??

Stress reaction is the body’s observable response to a stressor. Canadian researcher Hans Selye believes there are two types of stress. Distress (nervous stress) which comes from acute anxiety or pressure. It can also take a serious toll on the mind.

Eustress (positive stress) which come from the striving and challenges that make life exciting.

Stress is a part of life; Especially, if you are working towards a goal or facing any challenges. Research Hans Selye believes that the only “complete freedom from stress…is death”

Researcher Richard Lazarus believes that the way people perceive and evaluate a situation makes a difference. The Cognitive Model of Stress is when people analyze and then evaluate a situation before it is labeled “stressful.”

Conflict Situations Conflict situations are when a person must choose between two or more options that tend to result from opposing motives. Approach-approach conflict - when there is a conflict between two appealing possibilities. Ex: Which college should I go to? Should I go to the concert or the football game? Avoidance-avoidance conflict - when there is a choice between two undesirable possibilities. Ex: Should I stay up all night to study for AP Lit or AP Euro?

Approach-avoidance conflict - a result of being simultaneously attracted to and repelled by the same goal. Ex: Should I ask the guy/girl to the party? (He /she will say yes or no :-/, Asking for a raise, but scared if you do you might get fired. Double approach-avoidance – must choose between multiple options, however each option has desirable and undesirable aspects. Ex: Should I go to Key West or my dad’s new house in North Carolina? Key West will be AWESOME and expensive; Going to my dad’s will be free, but not as exciting…

Appraising the Situation What we choose to stress out about is determined by how we look at the situation. Primary appraisal is the immediate evaluation of a situation. Secondary appraisal is deciding how to deal with the potentially stressful situation.

Environmental Stressors Noise can cause unnecessary stress at work, home or in a public place. In fact noise is one of the top American environmental irritants. Crowding is other major environmental stressor. Crowding can cause feelings of aggression.

Life Changes and Stress Major life changes Marriage Job School Moving Death Illness

Social Readjustment Rating Scale See handout

Hassles vs. Uplifts Pressure Frustration Discrimination Conflict Everyday Hassles. The degree to which these affect us depends on issues of duration, frequency, personality, and coping style Pressure Frustration Discrimination Conflict Ex: losing your keys, being late for work, car won’t start, etc.

Uplifts are small, positive events. Getting a good grade on a test Winning a sporting event Going out with friends Winning a contest

Fight or Flight Response Means of survival

Sympathetic arousal: Increased heart rate, respiration, blood from digestion to muscles, masks pain, releases sugar and fat from body’s stores to deal with stress. Pituitary releases adrenaline into the bloodstream Release of cortisol/corticosterone (stress hormone) from outer part of adrenal gland (how we measure)

General Adaptation Syndrome General Adaptation Syndrome (Hans Selye) Alarm reaction (sympathetic arousal-need to fight off physical or psychological threats) Adaptation/Resistance (effort to maintain high level of resistance-attempts to maintain psychological equilibrium, parasympathetic rebound. Weakening ensues leading to…) Exhaustion (depletion of reserves) The body is designed to cope with temporary stress; prolonged stress leads to physical deterioration

Emotional and Cognitive Responses Anxiety – generalized apprehension of feeling of danger. Anger – irate reaction likely to result from frustration. Fear – reaction when a stressor involves real or imagined danger.

Stress and Disease Psycho-physiological illness Stress-related physical illness -“mind-body” Some forms of hypertension, some headaches, and gastrointestinal issues brought on by stress Cortisol in cardio-vascular disease Psycho-neuroimmunological disease Interaction between stress and the immune, endocrine, and nervous systems Chronic stress can suppress immune function. Role of cortisol (lymphocytes) Possible link between stress and cancer

The Brain on Stress http://www.fi.edu/learn/brain/stress.html The damaging (and helpful) effects of stress on the brain and cognition (hippocampus & cortisol, emotions and memory, brain-blood barrier, brain degeneration…) http://www.fi.edu/learn/brain/stress.html

Leading Causes of Death – 1900 and 2000

Stress and Health: Type A and B (and D) Personalities Type A Competitive, achievement oriented, hard-driving people (Friedman and Rosenman). Frequent or chronic stress can cause damage to the heart and blood vessels. Correlated with heart disease. . .Primarily due to 1) negative emotions and 2) associated behaviors Type B More easygoing, relaxed people Type D Emotionally distressed people. Often characterized by social withdrawal. Correlates with higher rates of stress, disease and death

Socioeconomic and Gender Difference Lower socioeconomic status can predict more stressful environments and fewer psychological resources for dealing with stress Women and men seem to be equally affected by stress physiologically, but deal with it differently (tend and befriend. Women deal more effectively (oxytocin) Men often react to stress with a "fight-or-flight" response, but women are more likely to manage their stress with a "tend-and-befriend" response.

Types of stress response Life events Tendency toward Health Illness Personal appraisal Challenge Threat Personality type Easy going Non-depressed Optimistic Hostile Depressed Pessimistic Personality habits Nonsmoking Regular exercise Good nutrition Smoking Sedentary Poor nutrition Level of social support Close, enduring Lacking

Social Support Social Support – information that leads someone to believe that he or she is cared for, loved, respected, and part of a network of communication and mutual obligation.

Types of Social Group Emotional Appraisal Informational Instructional Support involves concerned listening; offering affection and concern Appraisal support is interactive; asks questions and gives feedback to stressed person. Informational Comes from appraisal support; stressed person responds to what he or she has learned and evaluates how they deal with stressors Instructional support represents active, positive support in the form of direct help, such as money, living quarters, etc.

Coping with Stress Direct coping Intentional efforts to change an uncomfortable situation Confrontation Acknowledging stress directly and initiating a solution Compromise Choosing a more realistic goal when an ideal goal cannot be met Withdrawal Avoiding a situation when other options are not practical

Coping with Stress Cognitive appraisal is our way of interpreting or evaluating an event that helps determine its stress impact.

Defensive Coping Strategies Denial is when a person decides that the event or situation is not really a stressor. Intellectualization is when a person analyzes a situation from an emotionally detached viewpoint. See Fig. 15.11

Active Coping Strategies Hardiness A characteristic of people who can tolerate stress well or even thrive on it Controlling Stressful Situations Problem Solving Explanatory Style Optimist Pessimist

Relaxation Biofeedback Progressive Relaxation is lying down comfortably and tensing and releasing the tension in each major muscle group. Meditation is focusing on a goal of clearing one’s mind and producing “inner peace.” Biofeedback A technique for brining specific body processes (blood pressure or muscle tension) under a person’s conscious control.

Support Groups and Professional Help Humor Laughter is the best medicine Exercise Outlet for physical arousal Burns off stress hormones (cortisal) Support Groups and Professional Help

Improving Interpersonal Skills Training Preparing for a situation (an interview, a marathon, an exam, etc…) Improving Interpersonal Skills Increase self-confidence Self-esteem Less chance of loneliness

Stress in Your Life Autonomy is the ability to take care of oneself and independence. Growing up means taking responsibility and separating a part of your life from your family…physically and emotionally.

Choosing a College First major step of separation and becoming your own person. What are the college changes?? Developmental friendships – friends that force one another to reexamine their basic assumptions and possibly adopt new ideas and beliefs.

Coping with the change to college life Some focus narrowly on their goals because they feel they are threatened by internal and external change. Some avoid confronting doubt by frittering away their time, going through the emotions for college, but not emotionally attaching themselves. Some keep their options open until they acquire enough information to make a decision. Resynthesis is the idea of combining old ideas with new ones and reorganizing feelings in order to renew one’s identity.

The Working World What is work? What is your employment future? Work Satisfaction or Dissatisfaction Resources Financial reward Challenge Relations with Co workers Comfort

Changing Careers A career is a vocation that a person works at for at least a few years.

Comparable Worth The idea that women and men should receive equal pay for jobs calling for comparable skill and responsibility