Health Psychology
Health Psychology
Health Psychology
• People with chronic pain are often faced with difficulty in performing basic
activities of daily living such as dressing, eating, shopping, doing household
chores and engaging in social activities (Katz 1995).
• Hypervigilance
• individuals who are excessively attentive to their bodily symptoms
and is associated with monitoring bodily sensations for threat.
• This assumed to maintain bodily sensations and is seen in the
various fear-avoidance models where fearful patients become
increasingly vigilant for signals of bodily threat, which in turn leads
to avoidance behavior and increased disability.
• Fear
• Fear of pain
• Fear of hurt and harm
• Fear of disability
• Fear of loss of control
• Fear of surgery
• Fear of effect on family and relationships
• Fear of losing employment, loss of earnings etc.
• It is a normal reaction in the first instance to avoid
what appeared to be the cause of the pain.
• However, fear may lead to complete avoidance of that
activity.
• Depressive Symptoms
• A patient may be angry with the causal factor of their pain, which
may be secondary to a work related problem or trauma.
• The patient may direct their anger towards the clinicians for
suggesting weight loss, exercise or being unable to cure the pain.
• Clinicians also become angry and frustrated with patients for failure
to respond to treatment, This can cause the clinicians to lose patience
and sympathy leading to a breakdown in communication.
1. Psychoanalytic theory
2. Humanistic theory
3. Behavioral theory
4. Cognitive theory
10
Four Major Forms of Insight Therapy
• Psychoanalysis/
psychodynamic
• Cognitive
• Group,
Family,
• Humanistic and
Marital
Freud’s Psychoanalysis
• Psychoanalysis - an insight therapy
based on the theory of Freud,
emphasizing the revealing of
unconscious conflicts.
– Dream interpretation
• Manifest content – the actual content of one’s
dream.
• Latent content – the symbolic or hidden meaning
of dreams.
– Free association – Freudian technique in
which a patient was encouraged to talk
about anything that came to mind without
fear of negative evaluations.
Freud’s Psychoanalysis
• Resistance - occurring when a patient
becomes reluctant to talk about a certain
topic, either changing the subject or
becoming silent.
• Transference - in psychoanalysis, the
tendency for a patient or client to project
positive or negative feelings for important
people from the past onto the therapist.
Rogers’ Person-Centered Therapy
• Person-centered therapy - a nondirective
insight therapy based on the work of Carl
Rogers in which the client does all the talking
and the therapist listens.
• Four Elements:
1. Reflection - therapy technique in which the therapist
restates what the client says rather than interpreting
those statements.
2. Unconditional positive regard - referring to the warmth,
respect, and accepting atmosphere created by the
therapist for the client in person-centered therapy.
3. Empathy - the ability of the therapist to understand the
feelings of the client.
4. Authenticity - the genuine, open, and honest response of
the therapist to the client.
Behavioral Therapy and Classical Conditioning
• Behavior therapies - action therapies based on the
principles of classical and operant conditioning and aimed
at changing disordered behavior without concern for the
original causes of such behavior.