Health Psychology Lecture 6 Receiving Health Care.

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Health Psychology Lecture 6 Receiving Health Care

Transcript of Health Psychology Lecture 6 Receiving Health Care.

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Health Psychology

Lecture 6

Receiving Health Care

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Lecture 6 - Outline

• Part 1– Receiving Health Care

• Patient-practitioner relationships

• Hospitalization and noxious procedures

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Receiving Health Care

Receiving health care is a multifaceted process…

1. Notice the symptoms

2. Interpret the symptoms

3. React to the symptoms

4. Satisfaction with health care

5. Comply with medical recommendations

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Receiving Health Care

1. Noticing the symptoms

– Individual differences

– Competing environmental stimuli

– Emotional, cognitive, and situational variables

– Sociocultural issues

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Receiving Health Care

2. Interpreting the symptoms• Am I ill?

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Receiving Health Care

3. Reacting to the symptoms• Majority of symptoms are not reported to a health

professional

• What factors influence whether people seek medical care?

– Personal reluctance to seek care– Social and demographic factors– Symptom characteristics– Personality– Beliefs about illness (illness schemata)

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Delay in seeking medical care

Three stages of delay in seeking medical help for symptoms

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Receiving Health Care

4. Satisfaction with health services

• Commonly, people express a high level of satisfaction with their consultation

– Average = 88% (ranges from 43 to 99%)

• Patient satisfaction is affected by– Type of health issues

– Quality of patient-practitioner interactions

• Outcomes of patient satisfaction

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What are your major complaints?

Sources of dissatisfaction with medical consultations

• The doctor does not listen to them• The doctor is not sympathetic• They do not understand what the doctors tell them

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Patient-Practitioner Relationships

Satisfaction with medical care = satisfaction with practitioner

• Factors that lead to dissatisfaction include– Personal style

– Interrupting

– Terminology

– Differing aims and expectations

– Patient characteristics

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Receiving Health Care

5. Adherence to treatment regimes

• Nonadherence occurs when people do not adopt the behaviors or treatments prescribed by their doctors

– Average nonadherence = 50% (ranges from 15 to 93%)

– Nonadherence with medication - low (25%)

– Nonadherence with lifestyle changes - high (75%)

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Receiving Health Care

5. Adherence to treatment regimes

• Measuring nonadherence

– Clinician’s report, Self-report, Other-report

– Objective count of pills, biochemical markers

• Consequences of nonadherence - does it matter?– Often no deleterious effects but…– Over 10% of hospital admissions can be attributed to

nonadherence

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Receiving Health Care

5. Adherence to treatment regimes

• Causes of nonadherence - possible solutions

– Understanding and remembering the treatment regimen

– Satisfaction with patient-practitioner relationship

– Features of the treatment regimen– Features of the disorder– Contingencies - operant conditioning– ‘Rational’ nonadherence– Reactance and self-labeling

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Receiving Health Care

5. Adherence to treatment regimes

• Causes of nonadherence - possible solutions

– Simple regimens + written information

– Teach approachability, warmth, communication skills

– Promoting participation in decision making– Highlight benefits of adherence, costs of nonadherence– Cues, self-monitoring and reinforcement– Request a verbal (or written) commitment– Encourage patient to ask questions

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Hospitalization and Noxious Procedures

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Hospitalization

Relevance of psychology to hospitalization

• Determination of psychological effects, and their causes and consequences**

• Determination of effective interventions to prevent/reduce adverse psychological effects**

• Dissemination of information to relevant care providers

• Delivery of interventions

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Hospitalization

Satisfaction with hospital care

• Tends to be high (Cleary et al., 1991; Delbanco, 1992)

• Charles et al (1994) - Canada, 5 000 patients– Communication

• Did not understand answers to questions 8%

• Did not understand explanation of test results 15%

• Practitioners talked as if patient not there 12%

– Pain• Was not told about how much pain to expect26%

• Had pain which could have been eliminated 16%

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Hospitalization

Consequences of hospitalization

• Loss of Control (Taylor, 1979)

– Loss of control over one’s body

– Loss of control over typical activities

– Loss of ability to predict what will happen

• Explanations for problems

– Familiarity, time, effort, depersonalization, pain

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Hospitalization

Emotional Reactions to hospitalization

• Anxiety• Learned helplessness• Reactance• Depression

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Hospitalization

Individual differences in reaction to hospitalization

• Coping Skills

– Problem-focused (information seeking)

– Emotion-focused (cognitive restructuring, wish-fulfilling fantasy, threat minimization)

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Painful or Stressful Procedures

Intervention aim - reduce anxiety to recovery• Reassurance

• Information

– Sensory information (sensations likely to experience)

– Procedural information (mechanics of what will happen)

– Review of empirical evidence• Suls and Wan (1989)

• Anderson (1987)

• Auerbach (1989)

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Painful or Stressful Procedures

Intervention aim - reduce anxiety to recovery

• Cognitive-Behavioral Strategies

– Aim: Alter appraisal and enhance control or distraction

– Review of empirical evidence• Shipley et al. (1978)

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