Health Psychology Basics
Stress
Hormones and Physiology
Coping, Control, and Regulation
Health Behavior Change Theories
100

This limitation of traditional medicine helped motivate the development of health psychology as a field.

Focusing on disease without considering behavior and context (biomedical model)
100

Stress involves not only events, but also this subjective process.

Appraisal 
100

This hormone is released via the HPA axis and mobilizes energy during stress.

Cortisol

100

This coping style involves directly addressing a stressor or emotion.

Engagement coping

100

This theory focuses on perceived risk, benefits, barriers, and cue to action as it's main constructs. 

Health Belief Model

200

Unlike other traditional health models, this model emphasizes that biology, psychology, and social factors are interconnected.

Biopsychosocial model

200
This early researcher emphasized homeostasis and physiological regulation in stress.

Walter Cannon

200

This system produces fight-or-flight responses such as increased heart rate

Sympathetic nervous system
200

This psychological factor strongly influences whether coping improves wellbeing. 

Perceived control

200

This theory identifies behavioral intention as the strongest predictor of behavior.

Theory of planned behavior

300

The field of health psychology became increasingly important as medicine shifted to treating these types of conditions. 

Chronic diseases

300

This researcher proposed the General Adaptation Syndrome.

Hans Selye

300

This term refers to the cumulative physiological burden of chronic stress

Allostatic load

300

This explains why disengagement coping may reduce distress short-term but worsen health over time

Sustained stress activation

300

This model emphasizes readiness to change, but also has mixed empirical support.

Transtheoretical/ Stages of change

400

This explains why education alone rarely changes health behavior.

Knowledge doesn't equal behavior

400

This theoretical shift helped explain individual differences in stress response.

Inclusion of cognitive appraisal and coping

400

Chronic stress can dysregulate the immune, cardiovascular, and this system.

Endocrine or neuroendocrine

400

This concept connects coping strategies to long-term physiological regulation.

Self-regulation

400

This theory posits that the main drivers of behavior are autonomy, competence, and relatedness.

Self-determination model