Health Psychology Exam 1

Psychology He alth exa

72 cards   |   Total Attempts: 182
  

Cards In This Set

Front Back
Etiology
The origins or causes of illness
Biopsychosocial Model
Health and illness are consequences of the interplay of biological, psychological and social factors.
Biomedical Model
All illness can be explained on the basis of somatic bodily processes. Psychological and social processes are irrelevant to the disease process
Biopsychosocial vs. Biomedical Models
Biomed assumes mind and body are separate Biomed also focuses on illness instead of promoting health
Clinical Implications of the Biopsychosocial Model
The practiciner must understand the social and psychological factors that contribute to illness in order to treat it properly.
Acute vs. Chronic Illness
Acute illnesses are short-term illnesses due to a viral or bacterial invader and usually curable. Chronic illnesses are slowly developing diseases that people live with for a long time and often can't be cured.
Epidemiology
The study of the frequency, distribution and causes of infectious and noninfectious disease in a population based on physical and social environment
Morbidity
The number of cases of a disease that exists at some given point in time
Mortality
Number of deaths due to particular cases
Randomized Clinical Trials
Experiments conducted by health practicioners to evaluate treatments or interventions and their effectiveness over time.
Prospective Research
Looks forward in time to see how a group of people change over time.
Retrospective Research
Looks backward in time in an attempt to reconstruct the conditions that led to a current situation.
The Peripheral Nervous System
Consists of all the nerves in the body and is made up of the somatic and autonomic nervous systems.
Somatic Nervous System
Voluntary; connects nerve fibers to voluntary muscles and gives the brain feedback in the form of sensory information about voluntary movement
Autonomic Nervous System
Involuntary; connects the central nervous system to all internal organs over which people do not have control. It is regulated by the Sympathetic and Parasympathetic Nervous Systems.