Some burning issues in research on health behavior change

被引:30
作者
Schwarzer, Ralf [1 ]
机构
[1] Free Univ Berlin, D-14195 Berlin, Germany
来源
APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY-AN INTERNATIONAL REVIEW-PSYCHOLOGIE APPLIQUEE-REVUE INTERNATIONALE | 2008年 / 57卷 / 01期
关键词
D O I
10.1111/j.1464-0597.2007.00324.x
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
This response to five excellent commentaries is intended to clarify some issues in research on health behavior change that appear to be ambiguous or controversial, such as the debate about stage models versus continuum models or the search for moderators and mediators. The assumption of stages can be useful, but the quest for truly existing stages is considered fruitless because stage is a scientific construct, not nature. The Health Action Process Approach (HAPA) is designed as an implicit or explicit stage model, based on the distinction between a motivational and a volitional phase. As a template for targeted interventions, it suggests grouping individuals into preintenders, intenders, and actors. Due to indistinct boundaries between stages and to unstable social-cognitive constructs, the validity of stage assessment becomes the foremost problem. However, if stage-tailored interventions turn out to be superior to nontailored interventions, then the choice of the corresponding stage model is justified. When analysing the mechanisms of health behavior change or when predicting behaviors, the HAPA is also in line with nonstage (continuum) models. In the latter case, it examines moderators and mediators within a path-analytic research design. It is suggested that more research be conducted on moderated mediation.
引用
收藏
页码:84 / 93
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
[31]   The Behavior Change Consortium: setting the stage for a new century of health behavior-change research [J].
Ory, MG ;
Jordan, PJ ;
Bazzarre, T .
HEALTH EDUCATION RESEARCH, 2002, 17 (05) :500-511
[32]   The Australian mental health system: An economic overview and some research issues [J].
Williams R.F.G. ;
Doessel D.P. .
International Journal of Mental Health Systems, 2 (1)
[33]   Burning issues: communicating fire research in northern Australia [J].
Andersen, AN ;
McKaige, BJ .
ECOLOGY FOR EVERYONE: COMMUNICATING ECOLOGY TO SCIENTISTS, THE PUBLIC AND THE POLITICIANS, 1998, :88-96
[35]   Methodological Issues Related to the Use of P < 0.05 in Health Behavior Research [J].
Duryea, Elias ;
Graner, Stephen P. ;
Becker, Jeremy .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH EDUCATION, 2009, 40 (02) :120-125
[36]   Current issues and new direction in Psychology and Health:: Advancing the science of behavior change [J].
Michie, Susan ;
Rothman, Alexander J. ;
Sheeran, Paschal .
PSYCHOLOGY & HEALTH, 2007, 22 (03) :249-253
[37]   Effective delivery system for health behavior change: Practice and research in health psychology [J].
Uechi, Hiroaki ;
Ashihara, Mayako .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2016, 51 :671-671
[38]   How to Evaluate Technologies for Health Behavior Change in HCI Research [J].
Klasnja, Predrag ;
Consolvo, Sunny ;
Pratt, Wanda .
29TH ANNUAL CHI CONFERENCE ON HUMAN FACTORS IN COMPUTING SYSTEMS, 2011, :3063-3072
[39]   Health Behavior Change Support Systems as a research discipline; A viewpoint [J].
Kelders, Saskia M. ;
Oinas-Kukkonen, Harri ;
Oorni, Anssi ;
van Gemert-Pijnen, Julia E. W. C. .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INFORMATICS, 2016, 96 :3-10
[40]   The benefits and challenges of multiple health behavior change in research and in practice [J].
Prochaska, Judith J. ;
Nigg, Claudio R. ;
Spring, Bonnie ;
Velicer, Wayne F. ;
Prochaska, James O. .
PREVENTIVE MEDICINE, 2010, 50 (1-2) :26-29