This text offers a comprehensive overview of new approaches to health-related behaviour from a self-regulation perspective. The authors outline the assumptions on which self-regulation theories are based, discuss recent research and draw out the implications for practice with a particular focus on changing health behaviour. The book is arranged in two sections – Goal Setting and Goal Activation in Health Behaviour and Goal Striving and Goal Persistence. The epilogue compares self-regulation theories with the prevailing social-cognitive models.
Die Inhaltsangabe kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.
Denise T.D. de Ridder, Ph.D. is professor of Health Psychology at Utrecht University (The Netherlands) and scientific director of the Dutch Research Institute for Psychology and Health. Her research focuses on topics at the interface of coping and self-regulation with an emphasis on self-care behavior and adherence in chronic illness and eating and overweight in healthy individuals. She is co-editor of Psychology and Health and associate editor of Health Psychology Review.
John B.F. de Wit, Ph.D. is associate professor of Social Psychology of Health at Utrecht University (The Netherlands), and executive director of the master program in psychology at Utrecht University. His research interests encompass determinants of health behavior and strategies of change, and combine cognitive, motivational and volitional approaches to self-regulation. He has a longstanding involvement in the domains of sexuality and health, emphasizing the promotion as well as the maintenance of protective behaviors in vulnerable populations. Other work is concerned with motivational processes in risk perception and persuasion.
This important volume offers a comprehensive overview of new approaches to health-related behavior from a self-regulation perspective.
It outlines assumptions on which self-regulation theories are based, discusses recent research and draws out the implications for practice with a particular focus on changing health behavior. Reflecting the notion that health-promoting behavior is goal-directed, chapters consider key factors such as:
Self-Regulation in Health Behavior offers a valuable new perspective on health behavior. It is essential reading for MSc students in health psychology, as well as researchers, practising health psychologists and clinical health psychologists.
This important volume offers a comprehensive overview of new approaches to health-related behavior from a self-regulation perspective.
It outlines assumptions on which self-regulation theories are based, discusses recent research and draws out the implications for practice with a particular focus on changing health behavior. Reflecting the notion that health-promoting behavior is goal-directed, chapters consider key factors such as:
Self-Regulation in Health Behavior offers a valuable new perspective on health behavior. It is essential reading for MSc students in health psychology, as well as researchers, practising health psychologists and clinical health psychologists.
Denise T.D. de Ridder and John B.F. de Wit
Good health is of critical importance to many people while they are generally aware that their behavior plays an important role in achieving and maintaining physical well-being. In Western societies, it is difficult not knowing that one is, to some extent, responsible for one's own health as people are continuously reminded of the importance of their behavior for staying healthy by both public health campaigns and medical care professionals (Brownell, 1991). Yet, even though good health is generally considered important, and many people have good intentions for health behavior, the vast majority report difficulties in consistently performing those behaviors. They may find it hard, for instance, to maintain a healthy diet or a pattern of regular exercise in the face of temptations of modern life (e.g., Rothman, Baldwin & Hertel, 2004). Changing a bad health habit seems even more difficult than maintaining a good one (Polivy & Herman, 2002; cf. Norcross, Ratzin & Payne, 1989).
The proverbial road to hell does indeed seem to be paved with good intentions (cf. Powers, Koestner & Topciu, 2005). The question is: Why is it so difficult to act upon intentions or maintain attempts for changing health behavior, even for people who seem to be motivated? Only recently has the so-called "intention-behavior gap" started to attract substantial attention, and currently this is one of the most researched aspects of health behavior (e.g., Sheeran, 2002; Sheeran, Milne, Webb & Gollwitzer, 2005; also see Sheeran, Webb & Gollwitzer, this volume), and a crucial aspect of self-regulation. Self-regulation broadly refers to the processes of goal setting and goal striving, and includes dealing with a range of challenges that individuals may face when trying to achieve something that is important but, almost by definition, difficult to attain (Mischel, Cantor & Feldman, 1996). Important new questions arise from a self-regulation approach to health behavior, such as the following: How do people set health goals, and do they in fact have health goals? Are these goals authentic or merely a response to persuasive health messages or other social influences that are not well considered and therefore prone to failure? Which types of health goals motivate behavior, and what happens when health goals are in conflict with other goals? What are the conditions that promote or hinder the successful pursuit of health goals? And how do people deal with distractions and temptations when striving for health goals?
Self-regulation theories have not been designed uniquely to explain and understand health behavior and they are relevant in other important contexts as well, such as learning or organizational behavior (cf. Karoly, Boekaerts & Maes, 2005; for an overview, see Boekaerts, Pintrich & Zeidner, 2000). However, the health domain poses special challenges for self-regulation theories because of the substantial discrepancy that has been noted between the importance of individuals' health goals (or at least, what they report to be important health goals) and their frequent failure to act upon these goals. In fact, self-regulation failure in the health domain is a prototypical case to illustrate the relevance of a self-regulation approach to behavior (Baumeister, Heatherton & Tice, 1994). In turn, health behavior research can benefit from a self-regulation approach as this explicitly frames health behavior as a process of investing in long-term goals that require the control of immediate needs, which is one of the most important and difficult self-regulatory tasks (Brandtstdter & Renner, 1990; Mischel et al., 1996).
We feel that the self-regulation approach opens new perspectives for the study of complex health-related behaviors, and we are convinced that applying a self-regulation approach to critical issues in health behavior will result in a better understanding of why and when people effectively invest in their long term health than traditional approaches so far have done. In our overview of self-regulation approaches to health behavior we will not limit ourselves to one or two particular perspectives, as others have done (e.g., Cameron & Leventhal, 2003), but instead adopt a broad view that highlights important basic processes of self-regulation of health behavior, notably those involved in flexible goal setting and tenacious goal striving (Mischel et al., 1996). In the remainder of this chapter, we will first discuss what generally is meant by self-regulation, and briefly trace the historical roots of this approach. Next, we elaborate on different theoretical approaches to self-regulation, highlighting the cybernetic control approach (e.g., Carver & Scheier, 1998), a strength perspective of self-control (e.g., Muraven & Baumeister, 2000), and behavioral enaction strategy (e.g., Gollwitzer, 1999), respectively. We then proceed with highlighting critical issues related to the self-regulation of health behavior. In the last section we will give an overview of the book.
WHAT IS SELF-REGULATION?
Compared to other living creatures, human beings are noted for having an extensive ability to exert control over their inner states, processes, and responses (Baumeister et al., 1994). People are able to resist their own impulses, adapt their behavior to a range of standards, and change their current behaviors in the service of attaining distal goals (Baumeister, 1999). The term self-regulation is often used to refer broadly to efforts by humans to alter their thoughts, feelings, desires, and actions in the perspective of such higher goals (Carver & Scheier, 1998; Vohs & Baumeister, 2004). Hence, self-regulation refers to the person as an active agent and decision-maker, and is a vital aspect of human adaptation to life without which the individual would be a helpless spectator of events (Baumeister, 2005).
Psychologists' interest in self-regulation has burgeoned in recent years, and as an illustration Leventhal, Brisette and Leventhal (2003) found that two thirds of more than 2,700 publications containing the keyword "self-regulation" were published after 1990. This growing popularity promoted a range of views that differ in the various principles of self-regulation they emphasize and the specific mechanism they propose, but nevertheless share two basic properties (Cameron & Leventhal, 2003). A first common feature is to construe self-regulation as a dynamic motivational system of setting goals, developing and enacting strategies to achieve those goals, appraising progress, and revising goals and strategies accordingly. A second common characteristic is that self-regulation is also concerned with the management of emotional responses, which are seen as crucial elements of the motivational system, and that are conceived of as intricately linked with cognitive processes.
An issue of particular relevance in self-regulation concerns the processes involved in effective goal-pursuit that often extends over long periods of time and is frequently confronted with obstacles and temptations. How do individuals manage to successfully quit smoking, for instance, even though from time to time they may experience urges...
„Über diesen Titel“ kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.