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Managing Stress and Coping with Loss

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Managing Stress and Coping with Loss Chapter 4: Sec 1 Stress and Your Health Objectives Describe five different causes of stress. Describe the body s physical ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Managing Stress and Coping with Loss


1
Managing Stress and Coping with Loss
  • Chapter 4 Sec 1
  • Stress and Your Health

2
Objectives
  • Describe five different causes of stress.
  • Describe the bodys physical response to stress.
  • Differentiate between positive and negative
    stress.
  • Describe how stress can make you sick.

3
What Causes Stress?
  • STRESS
  • The bodys and minds response to a demand.

4
Type of Stressors
  • A STRESSOR is any situation that puts a demand on
    the body or mind.

5
Environmental Stressors
  • Conditions or events in our physical surroundings
  • Natural disasters
  • Noise
  • Crowds
  • Pollution
  • Poverty

6
Biological Stressors
  • Conditions that make it difficult for your body
    to take part in daily activities
  • Illness
  • Injury
  • Disability

7
Thinking Stressor
  • Mental challenge
  • Taking a test

8
Behavioral Stressor
  • Unhealthy behaviors
  • Smoking
  • Not getting enough sleep or exercise
  • Using drugs

9
Life change Stressors
  • Any major life change
  • Divorce
  • Death of a loved one
  • Getting married
  • Having trouble with a teacher
  • Having more arguments with parents

10
Research Highlight
  • Procrastination, Performance, and Health
  • Researchers found that the procrastinators
    suffered significantly more stress and had more
    health problems than non procrastinators.
  • Space out your studying and try to complete your
    assignments as early as possible. Procrastination
    can be hazardous to your health, as well as your
    grades.
  • Source Huffman, K. Vernoy, M., and Vernoy, J.
    (2002). Psychology in Action (5th Ed.). Davers
    John Wiley Sons, Inc.

11
Physical Response to Stress
  • The physical changes that prepare your body to
    respond quickly and appropriately to stressors is
    called the fight-or-flight response.
  • Past vs. Present the fight-or-flight response
    might even be maladaptive at times. Today, we are
    taught not to fight or flee but to stay calm and
    resolve stressful situations rationally.
  • Your body provides energy, reflexes, and strength
    to respond to a stressor.
  • Your body releases epinephrine hormones.
  • Breathing speeds up, heart beats faster, muscles
    tense up, pupils get wider, sweating increases,
    digestion stops, blood pressure increases, and
    blood sugar increases.

12
Emotional and Behavioral Response to Stress
  • Eustress is a positive stress that energizes one
    and helps one reach a goal.
  • Try to make stress positive.
  • Alert, focused, motivated, energized, and
    confident.
  • Distress is negative stress that can make a
    person sick or keep a person from reaching a
    goal.
  • Nervous, forgetful, frightened, confused, and
    unsure.

13
Stress-Related Disorders and Diseases
  • Tension headache
  • Cold and flu
  • Asthma
  • Migraine headache
  • Backache
  • Temporomandibular joint dysfunction (TMJ)
  • Heart disease
  • Stroke
  • High blood pressure
  • Chronic fatigue
  • Ulcer
  • Anxiety disorder
  • Insomnia
  • Depression

14
Long-Term Stress Can Make You Sick
  • The general adaptation syndrome is a model that
    describes the relationship between stress and
    disease.
  • Alarm stage
  • Your body and mind become alert (flight-or-fight
    response)
  • Headaches, stomachaches, difficulty sleeping, and
    anxiety
  • Resistance stage (adaptation)
  • If stress continues, your body becomes more
    resistant to disease and injury than normal
  • Exhaustion stage
  • Your body cannot take the resistance to the
    stressor any longer. You become exhausted, organs
    and immune system may suffer

15
Closure
  • What do you think would be the consequences of
    not having a fight-or-flight response?
  • Is all stress bad?
  • What is the difference between stress and
    depression?

16
Creative Activity
  • Create a post card or flyer relating to the issue
    of coping with loss.
  • Group (table activity). Write all group members
    name of the card. Everyone should participate.
  • Based on new knowledge, provide words of
    encouragement and show your support for a person
    who recently experienced a loss
  • Be creative and have fun
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