_______ CHAPTER 21
Social Psychology and Health
EmergeDIAdaptatic
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Although the organism-environment adaptationperspective operates at hoth microscopic and macroscopic levels, the two sometimes have been estranged by disciplinary boundaries. The moremicroscopic perspective, characteristic of psycho-
chosocial environment (e.g., smoking, lack of exercise. and stress).
The importance of psychosocial influences onhealth is now a major concern of biomedical science and also a major focus of social psychologicalresearch. This convergence has led to a new perspective on health which assumes that: (I) illnesshas multiple determinants. both biomedical andpsychosocial; (2) what is seen as a disease is notinvariant over time but changes based on sociocultural and biological definitions; and (3) the medicalprofession is a social institution that shapes itsmembers' views based on broad sociocultural considerations that go beyond scientific concerns.
It is impossible to encompass in a single chapter the full range of research that has evolved fromthis perspective; our review is necess~rily selective. [n the first half of the chapter, we discussresearch on the psyc~osocial determinants of illness, and in the second half we discuss research onthe psychosocial determinants of illness definitionand response. In each section we present an historical overview. discuss recent developments, andpropose future directions.
PSYCHOSOCIAL DETERMINANTSOF ILLNESS
RONALD C. KESSLERJAMES S. HOUSE
RENEE R. ANSPACHDA VID R. WILLIAMS
Until the early part of the twentieth century.biomedical researchers attended nearly exclusivelyto organic pathogens and assumed that: (I) diseaseis a deviation from normal biological functions;(2) diseases are generic and invariant over time andspace; (3) medicine is a scientifically neutral profession uninfluenced by wider social. cultural, andpolitical forces; and (4) each disease has a specificbiological cause (Mischler 1981). This last assumption, known as the "doctrine of specific etiology,"implied that a disease is best controlled by treatingthe culpable biological agent. The elimination ofpolio via vaccination during the 1950s dramatically epitomized the successful application of thismodel.
Despite such successes, some contemporarycritics argued that disease is often a normal biological response to abnormal environmental demands rather than a biological deviation, and thathealth varies over time as a function of changingenvironmental demands (Dubos 1959). Such notions construed health as a state of adaptation between the individual and his/her environment.These ideas have deep historical roots. They inspired the public health movement of the midnineteenth century to emphasize the importance of abenign physical environment for health. In theearly twentieth century. as public health advancesled to a shift in the major causes of death fromacute infectious diseases to chronic diseases. theseideas were broadened to emphasize the importanceof not only the physical environment (e.g.. cleanair, water, food, and sanitation) but also the psy-
548
physiologists and psychological social psycholo).'lstS. has focused on how proximal environmental'>timuli and contexts (e.g., stress and social support) affect individuals' behavior. mood. andphysiology. The more macroscopic approach, characteristic of many sociologists, demographers, epidemiologists. and sociological social psycholo"ists. has focused on the broader distribution ofhealth and illness in populations by such characteristics as age, race. gender, and geographic locallllO. This macroscopic approach also considershistorical and contextual influences on health. providing insights not apparent from an individualperspective. The decline in smoking in the UnitedStates is a good illustration. The long-term effectsl1f smoking intervention programs at the individuallevel have been modest. Yet smoking has declinedmarkedly and steadily in the United States over thepast quarter century due to broader contextualchanges-restriction of smoking in public places,increases in costs, and a changing set of societalnorms. altitudes, and values regarding smoking induced by political and mass media institutionsworking through intermediate levels of social organization. An important direction for future development would integrate the more microscopic andmacroscopic traditions in an effort to illuminatehow stress and adaptation are structured by broadsocial forces and how microsocial phenomena affect psychophysiological processes to produce observed patterns of health and illness.
Emergence of the Stress andAdaptation Perspective
During !.he middle of the twentieth century, physiologists Walter Cannon (1932) and Hans Selye( 1956) described a syndrome of physiological responses (including adrenocortical secretions andrelated neuroendocrine activation, increased gastric secretions. and higher heart rate and bloodpressure) to a wide range of environmental stressors or challenges, including infectious agents,heat. cold, physical pressure and restraint, and social psychological threat. Selye called this syndrome the "general adaptation syndrome" (GAS).
CHAPTER 21 Social Psychology and H~allh 549
According to Selye. GAS originally evolved as anadaptive response to physical stressors but has become maladaptive in modern society. where manystressors are chronic and inescapable. In the face ofthese modern stresses. GAS can lead to what Selyecalled "diseases of adaptation," such as hypertension, heart disease. ulcers. and arthritis.
Although Selye's model provides a usefulframework for understanding how psychosocialstresses promote physical illness. it does not explain how the SUbjective sense of stress itself isgenerated. Subsequently. social psychologists developed the framework known as the stress andadaptation model. This framework suggests thatcharacteristics of situations and individuals combine to create perceptions of stress or threat, whichideally elicit responses that reduce stress and protect health. Failure to do so results in ill health viamechanisms such as those originally explored byCannon and Selye or those identified by more contemporary biopsychosocial researchers. Whethersituations are experienced as stressful and how persons respond to them is now seen as a function ofboth preexisting personal dispositions and otheraspects of the situation. sometimes referred to asmoderating. buffering. or vulnerability factors (seeHouse 198 L Lazarus and Fol kman 1984: McGrath1970; for variations on this framework).
Since the mid-1970s, the stress and adaptationframework has stimulated major developments inthe study of the perception of and response to potentially stressful situations in social psychologyand related areas of medical sociology and healthpsychology. The evidence linking stress and otherpsychosocial factors to health is growing steadilyand. although as of yet not definitive. is made quiteplausible by the convergences of both laboratorystudies of animals and humans and nonexperimental research on broader human populations. recently augmented by intervention studies.
The initial breakthroughs in research on psychosocial determinants of illness occurred as thepsychosocial stress and adaptation perspective wasjust emerging. Initiated by physicians rather thansocial scientists. such work has been superseded bymore psychosocially sophisticated and empirically
550 PART III Social Siruciure, Relalionshirs, and the Individual
accurate formulations. However. these initial research programs played a critical role in estahlishing that psychosocial factors are important inthe etiology of morhidity and mortality and havestimulated important continuing developments inpsychosocial research.
Psychosomatic Medicine
Heavily influenced hy the hiomedical model. oneapproach to studying psychosocial factors in healthhas heen to focus on a speci fic disease and identi fyputatively distinctive psychosocial characteristicsof individuals with the disease. The earliest systematic efforts of this type were made under theruhric of "psychosomatic medicine," which initially involved the extension of psychoanalytictheory and methods to prohlems of physical illness.Franz Alexander (ILJS()). an early leader in thisfield. expounded a psychosocial doctrine of specific etiology:
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Suhselluent work related personality attrihutes10 specific illnesses. Suppressed aggression. forexample. was hypothesized to cause cardiovasculardisease. while dependency conflicts were implicited in an ulcer-prone personality. This traditionhas continued in efforts to identify personalitytraits and syndromes causally associated with diseases as diverse as cancer (Levy and Heiden 1l)\I()l.arthritis (Anderson ILJX5). diahetes (Ohwovoriolcand Omololu ILJX6l. and heart disease (FriedmanIl)l)(); Friedman and Booth-Kewley I\lX7).
Such research has suffered. however. frommultiple methodological prohlems. Studies arcmostly cross-sectional or retrospective. rather thanprospective in design. Samples arc often unrepre,cntat ive and analyses often fai I to control adequately for e\ogenous third variahlcs. which may,puriously produce associations hetween diseaseand personality. Thus it is difficult to interpret the
associations reported in this literature in a way 111.11
rigorously evaluates the influence of person~illll
on disease (Anderson ILJXS: Ohwovoriole ;11101
Omololu I\lX6).
The psychosomatic research has also ht'l'llflawed theoretically. Generally. a given person.ilillvariahle has heen studied in relation to only a Sill
gle disease. thus making it impossihle to knOllwhether that variahle may have similar assol'l;\tions with other diseases. A doctrine of specillletiology has often heen assumed rather than elll
pirically demonstrated. Recent careful reviews "I
the literature on personality and multiple dise~lsl'
outcomes. in fact. demonstrate that most "person,1Iity" variahles that show associations with one discase show similar associations with other diseascs,For example. meta-analyses hy Howard Friedm;1I1and Stephanie Booth-Kewley (ILJX7) found thaianxiety and depression are associated with coronary heart disease (CHD). asthma. arthritis. ulcers,and headaches. while a complex of variahles illllicating anger/hostility/aggression is associated withCHD. asthma. and arthritis. though prohably nolulcers and headaches. Thus. they argue that a generally "disease-prone personality" syndrome or sciof trait:-; is more likely to exist than distinctive"arthritis-prone," "ulcer-prone," and so on personalities. We return to more contemporary researchon personality helow.
Type A or Coronary-Prone Behavior Pattern
Research initialed hy Meyer Friedman and Ra)Rosenman ( ILJ74) on what they termed the "coronary-pronc hehavior pattern" or "coronary-pronepersonality" played an evcnmore central role in theemergence of psychosocial theory and research onthe etiology and epidemiology of physical healthand illness. At the same time. this research illuslI'ates the prohlems posed hy the doctrine of speci fic etiology. Friedman and Rosenman were practicing cardiologists who heliL'ved they sawcharacteristic patterns of hehavior in many of theirpatients. The) termed this the ·'type A" or coronary-prone hehavior pattern. which they conceivedas the result of an interaction hetween personality
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dispositions and challenging situations leading tohigh degrees of competitiveness. job involvement.time urgency, and hostility. Type A, assessed firstvia clinical interviews and later via questionnairemethods, predicted both the onset and course ofcoronary heart disease in several major prospectivestudies, leading the Review Panel on CoronaryProne Behavior and Heart Disease of the NationalHeart. Lung and Blood Institute (1981) to certifythe type A personality as a risk factor for coronaryheart disease. in the same general class as smoking,cholesterol, and blood pressure.
Further research, however, has confused theinitial understanding of type A personality and itsrelation to CHD. In recent studies of high-riskpopulations, type A has failed to predict CHD,perhaps because the controlling type A style predisposes one to adapt health-promoting behaviorswidely publicized in the 1980s. Other researchsuggests that the effects of type A may be due tocorrelates (e.g., mistrust) or components (hostility and anger) (Matthews 1985). Finally, morerecent research suggests that as with other putatively disease-specific personality variables orbehavior patterns. type A personality is associatedwith a range of health problems and diseases otherthan CHD. As research and theory turn increasingly from seeking the psychosocial causes ofCHD to understanding how psychosocial characteristics of persons and situations affect the fulldomains of health and illness, the type A constructmay become obsolete, leaving as a legacy the certainty that psychosocial variables. including anumber of key personality and situational correlates and components of type A, are significant riskfactors for a range of physical and psychologicaldisorders.
Life Events and Change
Drawing somewhat loosely on the ideas of Selyeand Cannon and a variety of research indicatingthat major life changes could be stressful andpathogenic. Holmes and Rahe (1967) hypothesizedthat change, whether for better or worse, requiresadaptation, and that high levels of adaptive effort
CHAPTER 21 Social Psychology and Health 551
could produce both physical and psychological disorder. They constructed a Social ReadjustmentRating Scale, which asked individuals to indicatewhether they had experienced each of forty-threelife changes in the preceding year and assigned toeach the average rating of the amount of adjustment involved in a model by a panel of individualsof varied social backgrounds. The summed total ofadjustment units for an individual has been repeatedly found to predict the onset of a wide range ofphysical and psychological disorders (cf. Cockerham 1986, 76-80: Mirowsky and Ross 1989).
Further research has suggested tlaws in boththeory and measures propounded by Holmes andRahe (1967). Most important, subsequent researchshows that it is only more serious negative events, notchange per se. that adversely affect health. Further,the life change weights of Holmes and Rahe provide little more predictive power than a simpleunweighted sum of the number of serious negativeevents. the most serious of which (e.g., widowhood, divorce, unemployment) also have been foundto have separate effects on morbidity and mortality,including cancer (Sklar and Anisman 1981), heartdisease (Wells 1985), and autoimmune diseasessuch as rheumatoid arthritis (Solomon 1981). Although research in this area is just beginning, theavailable evidence suggests that life events may bemore important in predicting the course of illness(e.g., speed of recovery, recurrence) than initialonset (Kessler and Wortman 1988).
A New Focus on Chronic Stress
For a time, the study of life changes and events wasalmost synonymous with the study of stress andhealth. During the 1980s, however, renewed attention was focused on chronic stress and deprivationas determinants of illness (Mirowsky and Ross1989; Pearlin 1989). These new studies suggestthat it is the more enduring stressful sequelae ofsuch events that explain thei.. effects on health. Forexample, the adverse effects of unemployment onhealth are partly mediated by resultant financialstresses (Kessler, Turner, and House 1987), whilethe relationship between widowhood and health is
552 PART III Social StTllcture. Relationships. and the Individual
partly due to the effects of social isolation (Umberson, Wortman. and Kessler 1992).
This renewed attention to chronic stress drawson two long-standing epidemiologic research traditions as well as on laboratory and field experiments. The first is a tradition of research on workand health that has suggested that high levels ofphysical and psychological demands (e.g .. workload. conflict, responsibility) can adversely affecthealth. Early work in this tradition compared aggregate morbidity and mortality profiles of different occupations that are comparable on all knownrisk factors other than job stress. yielding strikingevidence that indirectly implicated job stress as apowerful determinant of ill health (Kasl 197R). Amore recent approach has been to use multivariateanalysis to study the effects of job conditions onworker health at the individual level of analysis.The most persuasive studies of this sort have usedlongitudinal data to determine the effects of jobconditions on changes in health over time. Severalsuch investigations have documented significanteffects of job pressures and conflicts on mortality.coronary artery disease. peptic ulcers. diabetes, andpsychological distress (e.g.. House and Cottington1986; Karasek and Theorell 1990).
A second basis of the renewed interest in chronicstress is the persistence in the United States andmost other developed countries of socioeconomic,racial. ethnic. and gender differences in physicaland mental health, despite substantial progress inpublic health and the equalization of access tomedical care (Cockerham 1986; Marmot, Kogevinas, and Elston 1987). Although gaps undoubtedlyremain in access to quality and preventive care. andalthough biological factors play some role in theseaggregate differences, a growing body of researchsuggests that differences in exposure to chronicstress as well as other psychosocial risk factorsmay be central as well. For example. chronic financial stress plays a significant role in explainingsocioeconomic differences in health. and socioeconomic factors are central to racial differences inhealth (House et al. 1992).
A major methodological problem in this research is that measures of chronic stress. which are
typically based on self-reports. may be affected 11\acute and chronic life conditions and thereby COli
founded with current levels of health. Resolutiollof this methodological problem will require prospective studies that measure perceived levels 01
chronic stress at several points in time and lISl'
these reports to predict subsequent morbidity andmortality. controlling for health level at the time 01
the measurement of stress. In one effort of thistype. House et al. (19R6) found that men who rcported high levels of chronic occupational stress attwo points in time separated by more than twoyears were three times more likely to die over thesucceeding decade than men who reported lowerlevels of job stress at either or both times, afteradjustment for age, education. a variety of healthindicators (e.g .. blood pressure and cholesterol),and health risk (e.g., smoking) at the initial point ofmeasurement. Similar research is needed on theeffects of financial. marital. parental. and otherchronic stresses.
Until such research is done. experimental studies on animals and humans will continue to providethe most powerful evidence concerning the effectsof chronic stress on ill health. Several laboratoryexperiments and quasi-experimental studies haveexposed humans to mild stress (e.g .• demandinglevels of workload. responsibility. or conflict withothers) and have shown effects on a wide range ofphysiologic outcomes. including cardiovascularfunctioning (Manuck et al. ]989), neuroendocrinefunctioning (Krantz and Manuck 1984). and cellular immune response (Cohen. Tyrell, and Smith1991). Although the stressors used are, for obviousethical reasons. too mild to cause serious or prolonged health impairments. their effects recall themore marked manifestations of naturally oc<.:Urringlife crises. Animal experiments confirm data on human subjects regarding the pernicious physiological effect of stress. with recent studies documentingthat long-term exposure of mice and monkeys tothreatening social situations leads to impaired immune response to a variety of infections (Cohen etal. 1992).
In 1960. Jackson et al. demonstrated experimentally that people with chronic role-related
·0
stresses alper respir,to a nasathan a ntdocumenttion throu,is unclearnificant. Fson (1991
erature. thstress is ,control foexposurestudies b)these metIpie of healow doseneutral sasubjects fand contnences andinfectivit)of negatinegativesignificarcontroll ining varialInterestin.across thestress am(i.e .. the (to life ev(once infel
Vulnerat
A consishgation re\pie who;stressfulhealth pr'health tritally. the'that havetion. vari(pabilities
,tresses are more likely than others to develop upreI' respiratory infection when randomly exposedto a nasal spray containing viral material ratherthan a neutral solution. Although these studiesdocumented effects of stress on resistance to infection through various aspects of immune function. itis unclear whether these effects are clinically significant. Further. as noted by Cohen and Williamson (1991) in a comprehensive review of this literature. the few studies that directly document thatstress is associated with infectious illness fail tocontrol for the confounding effects of differentialexposure or health behaviors. A series of recentstudies by Cohen et al. (1991) resolved many ofthese methodological problems by exposing a sample of healthy volunteers via nasal drops to either alow dose of one of five respiratory viruses or to aneutral saline solution and then quarantining thesubjects for a full week after exposure to monitorand control their subsequent environmental experiences and behaviors during the period of potentialinfectivity. Results showed clearly that measuresof negative life events. perceived stress, andnegative affect assessed prior to the challengesignificantly increased risk of developing a cold.controlling for a wide range of potential confounding variables (including prechallenge antibodies).Interestingly. the pathways of these effects differedacross the three stress measures. with perceivedstress and affectivity increasing risk of infection(i.e .. the development of antibodies) and exposureto life events increasing risk of clinical symptomsonce infected.
Vulnerability Factors
A consistent finding across all the areas of investigation reviewed above is that the majority of people who are exposed to all but the most extremestressful life experiences do not develop serioushealth problems. Current research on stress andhealth tries to explain this finding and. more generally. the variation in stress reactivity. The factorsthat have been examined include biogenic constitution. various aspects of personality. intellectual capabilities such as cognitive tlexibility and effective
CHAPTER 21 Social P,ycho!ogy and Health 553
problem-solving skills. interpersonal skills such associal competence and communication ability, andsocial resources. including financial assets andcoping styles. Because full consideration of thisdiverse array of studies is beyond the scope of thischapter. we focus on two classes of variables thathave generated intense interest over the past decade: social relationships and support and dispositional/personality variables. especially what hasvariously been termed "control." "efficacy." or"mastery."
Social Relationships and Support. Current interest in the effects of social relationships and supporton health was triggered by several influential papers published in the mid-1970s that reviewed diverse studies demonstrating that such things asmarital status. geographic stability. and social integration are associated with both mental and physical health (Caplan 1974; Cassel 1976; Cobb 1976).A theme present in all these associations seemed tobe access to social ties and supports. Here. as in thecase of stress. the available evidence has comefrom experimental studies of animals and humans.as well as from nonexperimental studies of humanpopulations.
The presence of a familiar member of the samespecies buffered the impact of experimentally induced stress on ulcers. hypertension. and neurosisin rats. mice. and goats. respectively (Cassel 1976).The presence offamiliar others also reduced physiological arousal (e.g .• secretion of free fatty acids)in humans in potentially stressful laboratory situations (Back and Bodgonoff 1967). Such effectsmay even operate across species, with affectionatepetting by humans reducing the cardiovascular selJuelae of stressful situations among dogs, cats,horses. and rabbits (Lynch 1979. 163-80) and eventhe arteriosclerotic impact of a high-fat diet onrabbits (Nerem. LeveslJue. and Cornhill 1980).
Nonexperimental studies of human populations have devised scales to measure social integration and support and demonstrated that thesemeasures are associated with health. The most intluential of these studies examined the effects ofsocial relationships on subselJuent mortality in pro-
lI
I,I
II:iit!
I
554 PART III Social SlruClure, Rclalinnships, and Ihe Individual
spective surveys of the general population, The
first study of this sort showed that marriage. con
tact with family and friends. church membership.and affiliation with other social groups were allassociated with reduced mortality risk over a nine
year follow-up period in a large sample of respondents living in Alameda County. California (Berkman and Syme 1979). Subsequent reports byBlazer ( 1982) and House. Robbins. and Metzner( 19lQ) showed similar patterns in other longitudi
nal community surveys in the United States. sincereplicated in a number of European studies (seeHouse. Landis. and Umberson 1988 for a review).All of these reports were based on secondary analyses and none contained a comprehensive set ofsocial support measures, Therefore. though theyprovide strong evidence that social relationshipsincrease longevity. they do not allow an estimate of
the full extent of this inlluence or an understandingof the precise components of relationships. supportive or otherwise. that are involved.
Similar longitudinal studies have examined
the association between support and onset of physical illness. The most rigorous of these have focusedon coronary artery disease and are reviewed byBerkman (19R5). Despite broad consistency infinding some indicator of social relationships orsupport associated with decreased morbidity risk.there are inconsistencies. For example, social tiesare associated with disease incidence but not prevalence in some studies. while in others the onlysignificant predictors are associated with prevalence, The effects are limited to lower-class womenin one major study and appear only among men inanother. The aspects of social relationships thatseem to promote health vary across studies as well.Inconsistent findings of this sort further obscurethe mechanisms involved in the effects of support.
While research on social relationships andphysical health has focused primarily on direct effects. research on social relationships and mentalhealth has been more concerned with stress-buffering effects. In an influential research program. forexample. Brown and Harris (llI7R) showed that theimpact of stressful life events on depression was
substantially reduced among respondents who 10.,.1
an intimate confiding relationship with a l,il'lId "
relative. While nearly 40 percent of the .,1'"" ,\women studied without a confidant becanll' I k
pressed. only 4 percent of those with a conlld.II'1did so. This paradigm has subsequently been Il",11cated in many studies. and the general paltl'lII ,,,results clearly shows that access to a confidalll :111,1
perceived availability of crisis support arc a..,.,\l1 I
ated with a reduced impact of stressful life cn'II"
on depression and anxiety (Cohen and Wills I'His
Kessler and Mc Leod 1985).
Another line of investigation has used nwas
ures of social relationships and support to predllladjustment to specific life crises. such as widowhood (e.g., Umberson. Wortman. and Kessler 199.',and unemployment (e.g .• Kessler. Turner, and HOll'"1987). Almost all of these studies have been con
cerned with mental health outcomes. and l11o.,1have found that measures of social relationship"obtained shortly before or after a crisis are sigl1lt I
cant predictors of subsequent emotional adjuslment. Moreover. these focused studies begin 10
suggest that specific kinds of supportive ties maybe most helpful for particular problems. For example. Hirsch (1979) showed that low-density networks that facilitate contact with new people arcparticularly useful when the coping task is to obtain new information or adopt a new role. Interventions aimed at providing coping skills and supporthave been shown to reduce adverse health const:quences of unemployment (Price. van Ryn. andVinokur 1992) and widowhood (Raphael 1977).
Studies of specific life events or crises alsoprovide an opportunity to examine social supportprocesses in relation to other determinants of adjustment. such as appraisals and coping strategie~.
and in this way clarify the mechanisms throughwhich support may protect against illness. Lifecrisis studies conducted to date have not fully real
ized this potential but have provided two very provocative and consistent results. One of these involves miscarried support efforts. and the otherinvolves the distinction between perceived supportand received support.
The first
,'\aminatiomIV hat supportSuch studiesaujustmentl'fforts can a
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The first of the two results is based on focused'''lminations of exactly what supporters do andwhat support recipients think about these efforts.'illl:h studies show that while support can promote.Idjustment to stress, well-intentioned support,'Ilorts can also have unintended negative conse'1l1~nces, such as making recipients feel incompekill (Coyne, Wortman, and Lehman 19H8). Supportive actions can also create social costs that attlllles can lead to greater emotional distress than if'lipport had not been obtained at all (LiebermanI'lX6). Evidence of this sort has led to a heightenedl'i1~rest in detailed descriptive work on the dynamIl~ of actual support transactions, both as an aid ind~veloping theory and as a practical guide to devel"ping support interventions (Sandler et al. 1988).
This evidence on the mixed effects of actual~lIpport transactions has led to another importantIinding: while the perception that support is avail:Ihle is associated with good emotional adjustment10 stress, there is little evidence that this associalion is mediated by the actual receipt of support.One possible interpretation of this finding is thatIhe perception of support availability itself activelypromotes adjustment to stress over and above any:Iclual receipt of support. This could occur in any of,everal ways. The perception of support availabilIty might lead to an appraisal of stressful situationsa~ less threatening, thereby decreasing their psylhological effects (Wethington and Kessler 1986).\lternatively, it could provide a psychological"~afety net" that helps motivate self-reliant copingefforts (Rook 1990). The putative effects of perleived support on health may actually be due to,orne unmeasured common cause; for example, solially competent people may be more able to attract,upport and to manage stressful situations (Heller,lI1d Swindle 1983). Ongoing research is attemptingto evaluate each of these possibilities (Cohen, Sherrod. and Clark 1986; Sarason. Pierce, and SarasonIYYOl.
Personality. Although the early search for per,tmality traits uniquely associated with particularIllnesses proved fruitless. more sophisticated cur-
CHAPTER 21 Social Psychology and Health 555
rent research has focused on personality dispositions that can affect a broad range of health problems, either directly or as vulnerability factors.This new approach to the investigation of personality effects on health has gained momentum only inthe 1980s and is therefore less well-developed thanresearch on social relationships and support. Inparticular, there are few good prospective data onpersonality and health nor have the causal pathways linking personality to health been investigated in great detail. Only a few studies of personality and health have gone beyond main effectsanalyses to examine whether there are interactionsbetween personality and stress in predicting illhealth.
Most studies that have examined stress-buffering effects of personality are either studies of mental illness or laboratory studies of stress and infectious disease. The former have documented thestress-buffering effects of self-esteem, perceivedcontrol, and hardiness and the stress-exacerbatingeffects of neuroticism and interpersonal dependency (Pearlin et al. 1981; Cohen and Edwards1989). The latter have shown that introversion,social skills, and negative affectivity all modify theeffects of mild stress on infection (Cohen and Williamson 1991).
One of the most intriguing areas of investigation in this literature concerns a personality disposition variously termed self-efficacy, mastery, orcontrol. Sutton and Kahn (1984) reviewed a varietyof laboratory and field studies on this concept andfound consistent evidence suggesting that individuals who have a greater chance to predict, understand, and control events in their lives experience less stress and fewer adverse effects of stresson their physical and mental health. In a relatedresearch program, Karasek and Theorell (1990)have shown that lack of control over one's workenvironment is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease and psychological distress, both directly andthrough a tendency to exacerbate the deleteriouseffects of other occupational stresses. Pearlin andcolleagues ( 1981 ) have shown that a sense of mastery promotes mental health and buffers the impact
II
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556 PART III Social Structure, Relationships, and the Individual
of acute and chronic stress on mental health, Amajor program of research by Rodin (19R6) andothers has demonstrated that increased control overone's social environment can promote better physical and mental health, and even longer life, perhapsespecially for older persons. Langer and Rodin(1976) designed an inexpensive set of structuralinterventions in nursing homes to create opportunities for mastery experiences. Markedly positive effects on psychological well-being, physical health,and even the longevity of nursing home residentswere documented.
Finally, research on cancer and personalitysuggests that feelings of helplessness and hopelessness, as well as repression or denial of emotions,may both predispose people to the onset of cancerand exacerbate its course (Levy and Heiden 1990).Here animal studies yield especially dramatic results. Animals induced to become helpless throughbehavioral restraint and repeated exposure to stress(e.g., electric shocks) have lower rates of tumorrejection, earlier appearance of tumors, and fastertumor growth than control animals exposed to implanted tumors (e.g .. Shavit et al. 19R4: Visintainer,Volpicelli, and Seligman 1982). Although there areobviously no analogous experimental human studies, several prospective studies have consistentlysupported the hypothesis. A study of Veterans Administration patients found clear evidence ofgreater repression of negative affectivity on theMMPI among men who subsetjuently developedcancer (Dattore, Shontz, and Coyne 1980), and aprospective community study in Yugoslavia overten years reported similar results (GrossarthMaticek 1980). A prospective study by Greer, et al.(1985), subsequently replicated, found that helplessness/hopelessness is also associated with poorprognosis in cancer patients after controlling forobjective predictors.
These epidemiologic studies provide scant information on the mechanisms involved in the effect of personality on onset and course of cancer.According to the most widely endorsed hypothesis,a sense of efficacy and control affects the immunesystem, which, in turn, affeels host resistance tomalignant transformation of cells. This hypothesis
is consistent with both the broader literature onpersonality and immunity (Jemmott and Locke19R4) and an observed association between personality and immune competence among cancer patients (Levy et al. 1985). However, it is impossibleto preclude the possibility that the association isdue to an effect of illness severity on personality.Further research is needed to determine whetherbaseline measures of personality among cancer patients predict changes in immune function.
Another area for future research involves investigation of the structural determinants of healthrelated personality dispositions (Kohn et al. 1983).
In one of the few studies to examine this issue,Harburg, et al. ( 1973) found that suppressed hostility was significantly increased in high-stress residential neighborhoods versus low-stress areas.More research of a similar sort is needed to identifythe structural causes of personality and to specifythe mediating effects of personality on the relationships of these structural variables to ill health. Inaddition, research is needed to determine whetherthe effects of personality on health vary dependingon structural contexts. [n one of the rare studies toinvestigate this issue, James et al. ( 1987) found thatan active predisposition to master stress was associated with increased risk of high blood pressureamong low socioeconomic status African Americans but not among either whites or higher socioeconimic status African Americans, presumably retlecting the fact that social circumstances make itunlikely that active mastery will effectively reducestress in the face of the environmental barriersthat face lower socioeconomic status AfricanAmericans. More research is needed to investigate other interactions between personality dispositions and environmental conditions.
Psychosocial Determinants oflIIness: Overview
The past several decades of research and theorizinghave clearly established the role of psychosocialfactors in the etiology of illness. The major focu,and contribution of this work has been to estahlisha theoretical rationale and empirical evidence for a
number ofhealth risk(2) chroniships andefficacy, 01
(5) high Ie'personal rfpsychologision) is boand itself amortality.
Researneeded. Filand Jongituabout caus.tinuing neethe broad pquential fOIological mFor examplnegative lifhealth. butprecisely wterious anechronic aneof social rearguably 01
smoking, bwhat it is ative of he2produces Sl
Sociolcemphasizedfocus more,psychosoci.by a broadpeople aregender, an,1992: Pearlsearch suggcit fferencessocioeconolciation of 1
risk factorsbehaviors teVerbrugge I
number of psychosocial factors as consequentialhealth risk factors: (I) major negative life events;(2) chronic stress; (3) lack of social relationships and supports; (4) lack of sense of control,efficacy, or mastery over one's work and life; and(5) high levels of hostility and/or mistrust in interpersonal relations. This research also shows thatpsychological distress (e.g., anxiety and depression) is both a consequence of these risk factorsand itself a risk factor for physical morbidity andmortality.
Research and theoretical development are stillneeded. First, there is need for more prospectiveand longitudinal research to increase our certaintyabout causal relationships. Second, there is a continuing need for research to specify what aspects ofthe broad psychosocial risk factors are most consequential for health, and through what psychophysiological mechanisms these effects are produced.For example. we have learned that it is only majornegative life events which are most deleterious forhealth. but we are only beginning to understandprecisely what it is about those events that is deleterious and through what pathways they affectchronic and infectious disease. We know that lackof social relationships is a risk factor for mortality,arguably of a magnitude comparable to cigarettesmoking, but we are only beginning to understandwhat it is about social relationships that is protective of health and through what mechanisms itproduces such effects.
Sociological social psychologists have recentlyemphasized the need for theory and research tofocus more on the interrelations among these variouspsychosocial risk factors and how they are shapedby a broader social structural context in whichpeople are stratified along lines of race/ethnicity,gender. and socioeconomic status (Aneshensel1992: Pearl in 1989; Williams 1990). Current research suggests that many of the persistently largedifferences in health by gender, race/ethnicity, andsocioeconomic status can be explained by the association of these variables with the psychosocialrisk factors just considered and the health-relatedbehaviors to which we now tum (House et al. 1992;Verbrugge 1989). In quite a different vein. research
CHAPTER 21 Socia) Psychology and Health 557
on the interplay between psychosocial and geneticfactors in the etiology of health and illness is beingreported just now. We return to these themes at theend of the chapter.
THE SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY OF HEALTHDEHAVIOR AND ILLNESS DEHAVIOR
The study of health behavior and illness behaviorencompasses how people perceive, define, and acttoward symptoms, how they utilize medical care,how they act to promote health and produce risks,and how they adhere to medical regimens. Interestin health behavior and illness behavior grew out ofa set of practical problems in medicine and publichealth concerning the fact that many people delayseeking medical attention, even in the face of serious and life-threatening symptoms (Leventhal,Meyer, and Nerenz 1980; Rodin 1985), while others seek medical help for complaints with no discernable organic basis (Mechanic 1992b). Furthermore, many patients refuse to do what is seeminglyin their rational self-interest. continuing to smoke,drink, and overeat despite the warnings of physicians and health educators (Sackett and Haynes1976). Finally, large numbers of patients, perhapsas many as 50 percent. fail to comply with medicaladvice even when this noncompliance endangerstheir lives (Conrad 1985; Haynes, Taylor, andSackett 1979; Tebbi et al. 1986). These behaviorpatterns result in increased morbidity and mortality(Sackett and Haynes 1976), contribute to escalating medical costs (Fuchs 1974), and frustrate thosewho provide care (Mechanic 1992b).
These observations could not be explained using the traditional biomedical model and led healthresearchers to distinguish analytically between twoorders of phenomena: disease-an organic and biological process; and illness-a psychological, social, and cultural process that includes symptomrecognition, decision making, and utilization. Itwas argued that illness could not be reduced todisease (e.g., Barondess 1979; L. Eisenberg andKleinman 1981). While early work expanded themedical model to include psychosocial factors inpatient behavior, the research questions remained
558 PART III Social Structure. Relationships. and the Individual
largely medical: understanding why patients pro
crastinate. take risks. or fail to follow medical advice to modify these medically inappropriate behaviors (Schneider and Conrad 1983). In thisframework. medical judgments about appropriateactions were the "gold standard" against whichactual patient behaviors were judged and foundwanting. From a social psychological standpoint.this medical orientation excluded many importantempirical issues from consideration (Mechanic1978; Zola 1972).
Increasingly aware of these limitations. a number of social psychologists carried out patientcentered analyses of health behavior and illnessbehavior that moved in three broad directions:( I ) away from abstract models of rational choicesabout health care and toward understanding thelogic of lay theories and representations of illnessproblems: (2) away from an exclusive focus on the
decision to seek medical care and toward an emphasis on patterns of health and illness behaviorthat do not invol ve physicians: and (3) away froma focus on individual characteristics as detenninants of health and illness behavior toward underslanding how the social environment, including thehealthcare system, shapes these behaviors. Severalsocial psychological perspectives contributed tothis work. After brietly reviewing these perspectives, we examine how they are retlected in empirical research on health behavior. illness behavior,
and adherence to medical regimens.
Theoretical Perspectives
Culture. Social Structure, and Patient Behavior.Social psychologists with a cultural or social structural orientation have found that social groups differ in their responses to symptoms and patterns ofcare seeking and have attributed these differencesto cultural orientations or structural constraints.Researchers have examined ethnic differences inthe response to pain and symptoms as wcll as ethnic, socioeconomic. and gender differences in utilization patterns. Early research in this area oftenused purely correlational, cross-se<.:tional designsthat postulated reasons (often <.:ultural) for groupdifferences. rather than demonstrating them em-
pirically (Cockerham 1986: Mechanic 1978). Morerecent work has moved toward explanatory approaches, emphasizing that the structure of socialand healthcare institutions. as well as the culture ofcare seekers. shape health and illness behavior.
Integrative Models, Several e<.:lectic approachesdepict illness behavior as resulting from an interplay of biologi<.:aL sociocultural. and psychologicalfactors. The best-known example of this approachis Mechanic's theory of help seeking. Basing hismodel on a large body of theory and research.Me<.:hanic identifies ten cognitive. social, and psychological factors that influence the decision toseek help: ( I) the visibility and salience of symptoms: (2) the extent to which symptoms are perceived as serious: (3) the extent to which they disrupt sodal activities; (4) the frequency andpersistence of symptoms; (5) the tolerance level of
those who experien<.:e symptoms: (6) available information, knowledge, and cultural assumptions:(7) basic needs that lead to denial: (8) other needsthat compete with illness responses; (9) wmpetinginterpretations that can be assigned to symptoms:and ( 10) the available resources, physical proximity of care, and l:Osts of taking action (Mechani<.:197X). The strength of this approach is its effort to
develop a comprehensive, biopsychosocial approach to care seeking. However, as Mechani<.:himself acknowledges, the model is physiciancentered, focusing on the decision to seek conventional medical <.:are (S<.:hneider and Conrad 1983),though it could be broadened to include othersources of care.
Cognitive Models of Decision Making. Socialpsychologists have examined the cognitive processes at work in decisions to take preventive action.to seek help, and to follow medical advice. Untilre<.:ently, most psychologists employed one of anumber of rational choice models that assume thaIpeople make health behavior choices on the basisof cost-benefit ratios. Perhaps the best-known rational <.:hoice theory is the health belief model.According to this model. people decide to takepreventive action or follow medical advice on thebasis of their subjective beliefs about the severity
of the i1lnling ill. andaction (e.g1958: Ros.
This r\ufficienttradition. ,to considelions on in\implify t~
ing rationa
'tandards c1985: Tverics argue t~
theories, prhow decisil
quate desC'made.
More remotion in(1977). for,
making occfonnation pthey are aw.have hope,they have ercause of theCIS Ions, peollive copingddherence tl\ive avoidan([Janic).
Other hthe role of c,ymptoms aPeople who (,If them by n,entations st,lIons about t~
l'llurse, and plIl,m, and GI,ymptom proprocessor ofliCOl'S perspe1,lins a medic:Illfomlation pII'y common-
Ill' the illness. their susceptihility or risk of hecoming ill. and the costs. benefits. and harriers to taking.lction (e.g .. Becker and Maiman 1975; Hochhaum195~; Rosenstock and Kirscht 1979).
This model has heen criticized for giving in,ufficient attention to the role of cultural values.tradition. and emotion in decision making. failingto consider cognitive and organizational limitations on information processing that lead people to,implify the decision-making process. and eqllatII1g rational choices with those that conform 10 the,tandards of Western medicine (Garro I<.JX5; GoodI\)X5; Tversky and Kahneman 1974). In short. critICS argue that this model. like other rational choicetheories. provides a prescriptive. idealized view ofhow decisions should he made rather than an adequate description of how decisions actually aremade.
More recent approaches consider the role ofemotion in health decisions. Janis and Mann(1\)77). for example. propose that optimal decisionmaking occurs when people engage in "vigilant information processing'" which can occur only whenthey arc aware of the risks allached to each choice.have hope of finding an alternative. and helievethey have enough time to del iherate. However. hecause of the anxiety-provoking nature of health dec'isions. people often resort to one of several defective coping strategies. including unconflictedadh('rence to their present course of action. defcn,ive avoidance (procrastination). or hyperv igilance[panic).
Other health psychologists have focused on[he role of cognitive schemas in making sense of,ymptoms and deciding what to do ahout them.People who experience bodily changes make sense\1f them by means of common-sense illness repre,cntations stored in memory and include attrihutlons ahout the identity. causes. consequences. timeC:l)urse. and potential for cure (Leventhal. Zimmerman. and Gutmann 19X-l). Cognitive models of,ymptom processing depict the patient as an activeprocessor of information and emphasize the patiL'nt's perspective. However. this approach main[~\ins a medical orientation by emphasizing flaws inInformation processing. stressing: the need to modIfv common-sense representations to bring them
CHAPTER 2t Social p,yL'iwlnilY anu Hcalth 559
into line with medical ones. and neglecting environmental and structural factors .
Phenomenological Analyses ofDecision Making.Phenomenological approaches. developed in anthropology and social psychology. provide themost patient-centered perspectives on health hehavior and illness hehavior. These perspectivesconsider patterns of care outside the professionalsector and attempt to discover the logic of patientdecisions rather than analyzing them in terms ofmodels the researcher formulates a priori. Thesemodels include everyday ideas ahout the etiology.anticipated course. and consequences of a partiClIJar illness. Explanatory model research has goneheyond cognitive approaches to explore how models of doctors and patients collide in medicalencounters. how explanatory models relate tohroader cullUralthemes. and how they assume difkrent forms in different cultural contexts (Kleinman I<.JXO).
Other cognitive anthropologists have developed formal models of decision making in whichthe researcher el icits from patients their actual considerations in making medical decisions. developsa formal model of the criteria used in health decisions. and tests the model's validity hy comparingit to the aClllal decisions of community memhers(Garro IYX5). Sociologists have developed a phenomenological approach to the experience of illness that examines how patients notice somethingis wrong. develop lay thenj'ies and explanations.decide to seek help. manage relationships withsigni ficant others and health professionals. andcope with the stigma attached to their illness. Researchers emphasize the importance or studyingnonhospitalized patients and examining self-medication practices that do not involve professionals(Schneider and Conrad I<.JX3).
Empirical Applications
Health Behavior. Health behavior refers to theactions of well people that have consequences fortheir future health. such as smoking. diet. exercise.and substance ahuse (Mechanic !Yl)O). A numherof programs have heen developed to change health
560 PART III Soci~1 SlrUClllr~" R~I~lion,hips. ~llLllhe Indl\ldll,li
behaviors. Most are based on psychological models of hehavior change and. with a few notableexceptions. have generally not succeeded in effecting lasting changes in health behavior (Mechanic1990. 1992a). In fact. a review of the long-termoutcomes of many programs shows that as many asthree of every four people who successfully changerisk behaviors arc unable to sustain these changesfor as long as one year (Brownell et al. 1(86).
Critics have attributed these failures to the inaccurate assumptions of some psychological models of health behaviors and have proposed newideas about ways to modify interventions. Findingsconcerning the importance of cognitive representations. for example. have led to the suggestion that future interventions identify and alterparticipants' representations of risk. provide themwith self-regulation skills. and encourage them toperceive that they can effect change (Leventhal.Zimmerman. and Gutmann 1(84). Other healthpsycilOlogbts have called for programs that enhance perceptions of control. This recommendation is hased on research showing that participantsin weight reduction programs are more likely tosucceed when they attribute change to their ownetlorts (Rodin 11)85). Conversely. participants areless likely to relapse pennanently when they attribute lapses to situational causes (Marlatt and Gordon 1(85).
Some sociological social psychologists havealso suggested that traditional interventions fail because they treat health behavior as an individualrather than a social phenomenon (Mechanic [990;Syme and Alcalay 1(82). In particular. health behaviors may have other meanings that interfereWith behavior change (Mechanic 1(90). Smoking,for example. can he a mark of status and a symbolof defiance in adolescent culture (lessor, Donovan.and Costa )990: Osgood et al. 1988: Rodin 1985).Successful interventions to modify health behaviors need to consider such symbolic meanings. Thiscan be done by providing the individual with resources to resist interpersonal pressures. An example is Michelson's (1986) Social Skills TrainingProgram. a wide-ranging program that teachesadolescents to evaluate health behavior options
and to resist interpersonal pressures to engage inrisk hehaviors. Alternately. one may attempt tochange the cultural meanings of health behaviors.One of the most successful examples of this approach is the antismoking movement in the UnitedStates. a movement that changed the symbolicvalue of smoking in the middle class (Mechanic!1)90: Syme and Alcalay 1982) and resulted in asubstantial long-term reduction in smoking (Warner 1(77).
The importance of facilitating social and structural conditions is not limited to symbolic meanings. It is also important to consider the functionsof health behaviors in the lives of the people whosebehaviors we seek to change. Alcohol and tobacco,for example. appear to be used as coping resourcesby many people. This raises the question ofwhether interventions to change the structural conditions that lead to chronic stress make more sensethan interventions aimed at removing the copingresources used by people to manage chronic stress.FurthernlOre. if interventions do attempt to removethese coping resources there is a need to providealternate resources. See House and Cottington(1986) and Williams (1990) for a discussion. Asimilar question can be raised about the logic ofattempting to change individual health behaviorwhen powerful economic interests continue to promote risk taking (McKinlay 1990: Symeand Alcalay 1(82). It is noteworthy in this regard that statelicensing boards permit more retail outlets for thesale of alcohol in poor and African Americanneighborhoods than in more affluent areas (Rabowand Watts 1(82). Furthennore, more than 70 percent of billboards in the United States that advertise tobacco and alcohol are targeted to AfricanAmericans (Hacker. Collins. and Jacobson 1(87).It is difficult to avoid the conclusion. based onthese results. that there are systematic structuralforces at work that impede individual efforts toreduce the problems of substance use among disadvantaged sectors of American society. Based onthis conclusion. there is a growing belief that structural change is needed to guarantee the success ofwidespread health behavior change (McKinlay1990 ).
",
J..
i:
Illness Bways peotions andsymptom:and in res(Mechaniissues intenninantthat infl Ul
recognizeinfluenceations inmatic emwith illne
Rese,are substations to mand sociacreating tl1986). Foethnic groto symptcand TursIAn especgenerallysymptom~
nize and1986). Ththe lowerwomen arbodily Cl
comes froradiograplstudy selfvisits forwomen wwere nearreport reCI
Reseathe ways cof bodilytenns. Re:arrive at ato illness (neutralize.symptoms
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Illness Behavior. Illness behavior refers to theways people define and respond to bodily sensations and experiences that might be seen as signs orsymptoms of illness, both before seeking treatmentand in response to the recommendations of healers(Mechanic 1986). Important social psychologicalissues in the study of illness behavior include determinants of initial symptom recognition, factorsthat influence how symptoms are interpreted oncerecognized, and social and individual variables thatinfluence willingness to adopt the sick role. Variations in these ways of responding can have dramatic effects on the social impairment associatedwith illness.
Research on illness behavior shows that thereare substantial individual differences in predispositions to monitor bodily sensations and that culturaland social experiences play an important part increating these dispositions (Hansell and Mechanic1986). For example, early research discovered thatethnic groups differ dramatically in their responsesto symptoms and perceptions of pain (Sternbachand Tursky 1965; Zborowski 1952; Zola 1966).An especially intriguing result is that womengenerally seem more sensitive than men to bodilysymptoms and are therefore more likely to recognize and seek help for health problems (Kessler1986). This sex difference is more pronounced atthe lower end of symptom severity, suggesting thatwomen are more likely than men to monitor subtlebodily complaints. An interesting illustrationcomes from the work of Davis (1981), who usedradiographic examination data on osteoarthritis tostudy self-reported knee pain and recent doctorvisits for knee pain. These data documented thatwomen with objective evidence of osteoarthritiswere nearly twice as likely as comparable men toreport recent doctor visits for this problem.
Research on symptom sensitivity has exploredthe ways cognitive schemas are used to make senseof bodily sensations and define them in illnessterms. Research also has shown that most peoplearrive at a definition of their bodily changes as dueto illness only after concerted efforts to normalize,neutralize, or minimize the significance of theirsymptoms, a practice that may account for com-
CHAPTER 21 Social Psychology and Health 561
mon delays in seeking help (e.g., Davis 1971;Mechanic 1972; Schneider and Conrad 1983).These interpretations often involve the use of social networks. Parents, spouses, friends, and evenphysicians often collaborate in the normalizationprocess (Davis 1971; Schneider and Conrad 1983).
The literature on illness representations documents many dramatic cases that illustrate thisprocess. For example, people who are alone whenthey first experience a mild heart attack commonlydelay calling an ambulance due to uncertaintyabout what has happened to them. Instead, beforecalling an ambulance they will call a friend or relative, describe the symptoms, and ask whether theother person thinks it was really a heart attack.This delay is associated with a dramatically increased risk of long-term cardiac damage (Alonzo1986).
Illness behavior research also has examinedhow groups differ in utilization patterns. Beginning with Koos's (1954) early work on socioeconomic differences in help seeking, research hasdocumented that the poor use health services lessfrequently than those more favorably situated inthe social structure. Although expanded public insurance coverage has dramatically decreased socioeconomic differences in overall utilization, continuing differences in utilization patterns suggest atwo-class system of health care. While higher socioeconomic groups use private physicians, thepoor use a public healthcare system of outpatientclinics and hospital emergency rooms (Cockerham1986). Early cultural explanations attributed thesedi fferences to a greater tendency of poor patients tonormalize or neutralize symptoms (Koos 1954) or,alternatively, to a present-oriented culture of poverty that led poor patients to eschew prevention anddelay seeking help until emergencies arose (e.g.,Kosa, Antonovsky, and Zola 1969). However,more recent "systems" or "culture of medicine"explanations suggest that the highly alienating,impersonal, bureaucratic atmosphere and low quality of care in the public healthcare system leadspoor patients to view medical care as a measureof the last resort (e.g., Dutton 1978; Reissman)981).
562 PART 1lI Social Structure, Relationships, and the Individual
Current research has moved away from an exclusive focus on the decision to seek medical careand toward a focus on care that extends beyondconventional medicine (e.g., Garro 1985). Whileearly studies viewed the use of alternative practitioners as a deviant pattern of utilization confinedto lower socioeconomic classes or ethnic enclavesusing parochial referral networks, it has becomeclear based on more recent studies that many patients with chronic medical problems are turning toalternative practitioners, such as chiropractors andacupuncturists, who offer hope of symptomatic relief and more personal attention (D. Eisenberg et al.1993; Kotarba 1983).
Although most research on illness behaviorcontinues to study patient responses from the viewpoint of the medical establishment, a growing number of studies are questioning professional definitions of illness and giving more attention to thepatient viewpoint (e.g., Roth and Conrad 1987).Whereas earlier studies invidiously contrasted layexplanations with professional ones, several contemporary researchers portray both lay and medicaldecisions as socially constructed. These analysessuggest that professional diagnosis and treatmentdecisions are influenced by the cultural assumptions of providers, the perceived characteristics ofpatients, and the social setting in which decisionsare made (Todd 1989).
Another current trend in illness behavior research is to focus on patient self-care. This researchhas shown that many people diagnose and treattheir own symptoms (Zola 1983). Furthermore, patients who are receiving medical treatment forchronic conditions commonly search for patterns intheir symptoms, make note of antecedents to flareups, develop and test hypotheses, and sometimeseven devise strategies thought to control symptomexpression (e.g., Schneider and Conrad 1983).
Treatment Adherence. Patient failure to followmedical advice is a widespread phenomenon thatreduces the effectiveness of therapy (Rodin andSalovey 1989) and may significantly increase morbidity and mortality (Sackell and Haynes 1976).Buckalew and Sallis (1986) estimated that roughly
one-third of the 750 million new prescriptions Willten each year in the United States and the UlIil~'d
Kingdom are not taken at all and another one-thirdare taken incorrectly. Nonadherence for medicItion and lifestyle changes recommended to trcalchronic conditions is estimated at roughly 50 percent (Haynes, Taylor, and Sackett 1979). Surpri,ingly, these high rates exist even for those paticllhwith life-threatening and seriously disabling condltions. For example, Tebbi et al. (1986) found lhalonly 50 percent of adolescent cancer patients tooktheir prescription medications as directed, whlkConrad (1985) found that only 50 percent of Cpl
leptics took their medications correctly.Determinants of adherence include a wide va
riety of individual and environmental factors (Dr·Malleo and DiNicola 1982). As in the case of illness behavior, social and symbolic meanings 01medications figure importantly in adherence. Patients view medications alternatively as an indicator of the degree of their disorder, a ticket to normality that can increase self-reliance, a symbol 01
dependence, or a reminder of deviance and stigma.Nonadherence is powerfully affected by thc~~'
meanings. For example, some epileptic paticlII,stop taking their medication against medical advin~when they view drugs as a symbol of their dependence and wish to reassert their independence orwhen they view drugs as a reminder of differcntness and want to escape the stigmatizing connolations (Schneider and Conrad 1983).
Illness representations also have been shownto play a prominent role in adherence. Researchconsistently shows that there are major discrepallcies between the illness representations of patienhand of healthcare providers and that these diffcrences play an important part in adherence. LevclIthaI et al. (1984), for example, proposed that mall}patients with chronic, asymptomatic illnesses farlto follow physician advice because they use all"acute disease schema" to interpret their medicalproblems. That is, they believe their disease to tx·caused by external agents that are short-terlll,symptomatic, and treatable by medications that fl'
move the symptoms and cure the disease. WhclItheir experiences in treatment clash with these pcr
ceptions. thic'nt with th(iutmann (I,ive patient~
pressure beiaches and f.uf the patie,panse to tIllcnts defie,orne to stolhigh blood~tn acute discIlcnts with ;drop out of'hese. there idistribution (and investig,ense represt1986).
The litt:shows clearlelicit informi!lness reprebetween the~
recommendatient's theoricate in theseadherence (\experimentallive show th.,icians chanpatients. Inudocumented 1
lion style wita single twoccnt increaseamong patienlphysicians. Snumber of ott\cntions (Me
Research,hows that atIllunication st()f informatioquestions-inI969: Freem(
"l'ptions. they often terminate treatment. ConsisIl'nt with this perspective. Meyer. Leventhal. andl Jutmann ( 1985) found that 90 percent of hyperten,ive patients believed they could "feel" their bloodpressure being elevated by such symptoms as headal'hes and face tlushing, This perception led someDf the patients to adjust their medications in response to these feelings, even when the adjustIllents defied physician instructions, It also led,orne to stop taking medications when feelings ofIligh blood pressure persisted. The persistence of~m acute disease schema may also explain why patients with asymptomatic, chronic illnesses oftendrop out of treatment. Based on findings such asthese. there is much current interest in studying thedistrihution of illness representations (Bishop 1987)~md investigating ways to modify these commonsense representations to promote adherence (Cleary1986).
The literature on doctor-patient interactionsshows dearly that it is critical for the doctor todicit information about patient expectations andillness representations, to confront discrepancieshetween these cognitions. and to explain treatmentrecommendations in a way congruent with the patient's theories of illness. Doctors who communicate in these ways have consistently higher rates ofadherence (Whitcher-Alagna 191'3). Furthermore.~xperimental interventions based on this perspective show that adherence can he improved by physicians changing their style of interacting withpatients. Inui. Yourtee, and Williamson (1976)documented that changes in physician communication style with hypertensive patients resulting froma single two-hour training session led to a 30 percent increase in effective blood pressure controlamong patients experimentally assigned to the trainedphysicians. Similar results have been reported for anumber of other cognitively-based adherence interventions (Meichenbaum and Turk 1987).
Research on doctor-patient interaction alsoshows that other characteristics of physician communication style--quantity of information. qualityof information. and willingness to let patients askLjuestions-importantly affect adherence (Davis1969: Freemon et al. 1971: Roter and Hall 191'9:
CHAPTER 21 Social Psy<'ho[ogy and Heallh 563
Svarsted 1976), Many studies demonstrate thatphysicians frequently fall short on all of these dimensions. There is currently a good deal of interestin the structural determinants of these aspects ofphysician communication behavior aimed at understanding why many doctors interact in ways thatproduce the very nonadherence they find so troublesome. Some researchers argue that the logic ofdifferential diagnosis. coupled with the demandsassociated with rapidly processing information inbureaucratic organizations. drastically limits whatdoctors can accomplish in the medical interview(Cicourel 191'1), Others have suggested that ashealth care comes to be delivered increasingly in acolleague-dependent context of referral. physiciansbecome oriented to the wishes of colleagues ratherthan the wishes of their patients. Subsequently.effective doctor-patient communication is impaired (Freidson 1970). A related observation isthat providers' cultural assumptions can makethem less inclined to encourage active patient participation. For example. Anspach (1993) observesthat many providers have a "common-sense socialpsychology" that underestimates patients' competence to participate in medical decisions and overestimates the likelihood of deleterious psychological consequences that can result from participatingin medical decisions. Providers' cultural assumptions also include social schemata that lead professionals to underestimate the ability of lower-classHispanic patients to participate in certain medicaldecisions (Anspach 1993). In short, physicians curtail patient participation. thereby discouraging adherence. less because of conscious choice than because of organizational restraints and misguidedcultural assumptions.
The Social Psychology of Health Behavior andIllness Behavior: Overview
A growing body of research shows that psychosocial factors are crucial to understanding and modifying health and illness behavior. Researchers differ as to whether they examine psychosocialprocesses in an effort to change patient behavior inways that will improve health outcomes or take a
564 PART III Social Structure, Relationships, and the Individual
··1··'····!.·..··•
...
patient-centered approach that examines a broaderset of issues concerning lay representations ofhealth problems and other meanings of health andillness behaviors, Researchers also focus variablyon processes involved in the creation of health andillness behaviors or on the impact of macrosocialcontexts on these behaviors, Unlike most otherareas of social psychological research, there aremany opportunities here for developing and implementing large-scale interventions that can be usefulboth in applying social psychological knowledgeand advancing the knowledge base, A challenge forthe future is to integrate research on the structuraldeterminants of health and illness behaviors withresearch on the mechanisms linking meaning structures to behavioral responses and to devise methods of intervening at a more structural level thanwe have at present.
RETROSPECT AND PROSPECT
Theory and research on social psychology andhealth have developed remarkably over the past
NOTE
Work on this chapter was partially supported by grantsK02 MH00507 from the National Institute of MentalHealth and PO I AG0556I and R29 AG07904 from theNational Institute on Aging. The authors are indebted to
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570 PART III Social Struclure. Relationships, and the Individual
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This chaptepeets of sothat occur ihave historlective behbehavior relem-solvingcollective a,tions. to bephenomenamovementsumbrella coamong sch(1992; Tum!theoretical 'cial movetr.events, suclcrowd acti(of both of 1
tations WOl
we focus pdo includelective betthemes anechapter.2
As witlis ambiguittion of socient theoretiwhat dlfferlmost concements: chaI