Title: Stress, Health, and Adjustment
1Chapter 10
- Stress, Health, and Adjustment
2Stress
- Stress is the demand made on an organism to
adapt, cope, or adjust. - Some stress is healthful (eustress).
- Intense of prolonged stress can harm the body.
3Daily Hassles
- Daily hassles are regularly occurring conditions
and experiences that can threaten or harm our
well-being. - Examples
- Household
- Health
- Time-pressure
- Environmental
- Financial
- Work
- Linked to nervousness, worrying, inability to get
started, feelings of sadness, and feelings of
loneliness.
4Life Changes
- Life changes require adjustment. Even positive
ones can lead to headaches, high blood pressure,
and other health problems. - Life changes differ from daily hassles in two key
ways - Many life changes are positive and desirable.
Hassles are negative. - Hassles occur regularly. Life changes occur at
irregular intervals. - Example of life change death of a spouse is
considered the most stressful life change.
5CONTROVERSY IN PSYCHOLOGY Just How Are Daily
Hassles and Life Changes Connected With Health
Problems?
- It may appear obvious that hassles and life
changes should cause health problems. - But some researchers are not convinced that the
causal connections are there. - Correlational evidence.
- Positive versus negative life changes.
- Personality differences.
- Cognitive appraisal.
- Optimism also helps people cope with the effects
of stress.
6Conflict
- Conflict is the feeling of being pulled in two or
more directions by opposing motives. - Conflict is frustrating and stressful.
- There are four types of conflicts
- Approach-approach
- Avoidance-avoidance
- Approach-avoidance
- Multiple approach-avoidance.
7Types of Conflict
- Approach-approach conflict.
- The least stressful type.
- Each of two goals is desirable and both are
within reach. - Avoidance-avoidance conflict.
- More stressful.
- A person is motivated to avoid each of two
negative goals. Avoiding one of them requires
approaching the other.
8Types of Conflict
- Approach-avoidance conflict.
- The same goal produces both approach and
avoidance motives. - Pluses and minuses, good points and bad points.
- Multiple approach-avoidance conflict.
- Each of several alternative courses of action has
pluses and minuses. - Decision making can also be stressful especially
when there is no clear correct choice.
9Irrational Beliefs
- Ellis notes that our beliefs about events as well
as the events themselves can be stressors. - Elliss A-B-C approach.
- A is the activating event.
- B is the belief.
- C is the consequence.
- Ellis proposes that many of us carry with us
irrational beliefs doorways to distress.
10The Type A Behavior Pattern
- Type A people are
- Highly driven
- Competitive
- Impatient
- Aggressive
- Feel rushed and under pressure
- Find it difficult to give up control or power
- Type B people in contrast are
- Relaxed
- More focused on the quality of life
- Less ambitious and less impatient.
11Psychological Moderators of Stress
- Self-efficacy
- Expectations affect our ability to withstand
stress. - People who are self-confident are less prone to
be disturbed by adverse events.
12Psychological Moderators of Stress
- Psychological Hardiness
- Psychological hardiness also helps people resist
stress and live longer, happier lives. - Characteristics include
- High in commitment.
- High in challenge.
- High in perceived control.
- Hardy people are high in internal locus of
control.
13Psychological Moderators of Stress
- Sense of Humor
- Feelings of happiness may have beneficial effects
on the immune system. - Humor can moderate the effects of stress.
- Laughter stimulates the output of endorphins.
14Psychological Moderators of Stress
- Predictability and Control.
- The ability to predict a stressor apparently
moderates its impact. - Control and even the illusion of control can
moderate impact.
15Psychological Moderators of Stress
- Social Support
- seems to act as a buffer against the effects of
stress. - Sources of social support include
- Emotional concern.
- Instrumental aid.
- Information.
- Appraisal.
- Socializing.
16Stress and the Body
- The General Adaptation Syndrome.
- The general adaptation syndrome was proposed by
Selye. - The syndrome is a cluster of bodily changes that
occur in three stages - Alarm
- Resistance
- Exhaustion
17Stress and the Body
- The Alarm Reaction.
- The alarm reaction is triggered by perception of
a stressor. - The reaction mobilizes or arouses the body.
- This mobilization is the basis for the
instinctive fight-or-flight reaction. - The alarm reaction involves the sympathetic
division of the ANS.
18Stress and the Body
- The Resistance Stage.
- If the stressor isnt removed we enter the
adaptation or resistance stage. - The body attempts to restore lost energy and
repair bodily damage.
19Stress and the Body
- The Exhaustion Stage.
- If the stressor isnt dealt with we may enter the
exhaustion stage. - The body is depleted of the resources required
for combating stress. - Symptoms may include allergies, coronary heart
disease, death. - Stress suppresses the immune system!
20Psychology and Health Headaches,
Cardiovascular Disorders, Cancer, and Sexually
Transmitted Infections
- Biological factors such as
- pathogens, inoculations, injuries, age, gender,
and a family history of disease may be the most
obvious cause of disease. - Genes only create the predisposition toward the
health problem. - Many health problems are affected by
psychological factors, such as attitudes,
emotions, and behavior. - Stopping smoking, eating right, exercising and
controlling alcohol use would prevent a number of
types of deaths.
21Figure 10.4 Factors in Health and Illness Various
factors figure in to a persons state of health
or illness. Which of the factors in this figure
are you capable of controlling? Which are beyond
your control?