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Abnormal
Psychology PSY404
VU
Lesson
29
STRESS
What
is stress?
Stress
is a process of adjusting to circumstances
that disrupt or threaten a person's
equilibrium.
Scientists
define stress
as any
challenging event that requires
physiological, cognitive, or behavioral
adaptation.
Why
study stress?
Scientists
once thought that stress
contributed only to a few physical
diseases, like ulcers,
migraine
headaches,
hypertension (high blood pressure),
asthma, and other psychosomatic
disorders, a
term
indicating
that a disease is a product of
both the psyche
(mind)
and the soma
(body).
Today,
the term "psychosomatic disorder" is
old-fashioned.
How
stress effects
us?
Medical
scientists now view
every
physical
illness--from colds to cancer
and AIDS--as a product of
the
interaction
between the mind and
body.
Behavioral
medicine is a
multidisciplinary field that
includes both medical and
mental health
professionals
who investigate psychological
factors in the symptoms, cause,
and treatment of physical
illnesses.
Psychologists who specialize in
behavioral medicine often are
called health
psychologists.
Learning
more adaptive ways of
coping
responses
aimed at diminishing the burden of
stress, can limit
the
recurrence or improve the course of
many physical
illnesses.
Examples
1- A
works at an office for ten
hours a day, in her office
on most days of the week
there is no
electricity,
even when there is electricity the AC
does not work. By the end of
the day the A is tired,
depressed,
hot and irritable.
2- Mr.
x is waiting for an important
job interview, he hopes to
get the job with his
charming manners
and
personality because his grades
are average his mouth is
dry, his heart beats
faster, sweat breaks
out
on
his forehead.
3-
I have
pain in my tooth , I need to see my
dentist but the very thought of his
dental clinic makes me
shiver,
I am nervous, I sweat, my heart
beats faster and I have
all sorts of strange
feelings in my
stomach.
All
of these three examples on
stress involve a relationship between
people and their environments or
between
stressors
and
stress
reactions.
Stressors
are
events and situations to
which people adjust (exam,
job interview, an operation). Stress
reactions
are the physiological, cognitive and
behavioral responses that people display
to stress (nausea,
nervousness
and tired).
Major
stressors may be the pleasant
events such as promotion
more responsibility and wedding
also
acts
as stressors. The unpleasant
events such as being fired at
work, retirement, death of a loved
one,
divorce
etc are events that
involve frustration, pressure, boredom,
trauma, conflict, or
change.
How
do we measure stress?
We
have psychological tests
like
1-
The Social Readjustment Rating Scale
(SRRS)
2-
The Daily Hassles and Uplifts
Scale
Thomas
Holmes and Richard Rahe in the
SRRS, included a wide range of change
related stressors in
the
43 items of SRRS developed in 1967. They
asked people to rate these 43
stressors in terms of life
change
units that
is the amount of change and demand
for adjustments, these given
stressors
introduce
into an individual's life. In the daily
hassles and uplifts scale
the respondent is asked to
identify
which of these items in the
list she experienced in the
past month and to rate them
on a three
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Psychology PSY404
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point
scale. Hassles include losing things or getting
late for work. Uplifts
include saving money, eating
out,
relaxing and getting a present.
Scientists
continue to debate whether stress is best
defined as
1-
Stress as a Life Event
itself
2-
Stress as Appraisal
of
Life Events, the event plus the
individual's reaction to it.
.
1-
Stress as a Life
Event
Researchers
often define stress as a life
event--a difficult circumstance
regardless of the individual's
reaction
to it. For example, Holmes
and Rahe's Social
Readjustment Rating Scale
(SRRS) assigned
stress
values
to life events based on the
judgments of a large group of
normal adults. The SRRS
views
stressors
that produce more life
change units as
causing more stress.
Researchers consistently link
stress
ratings
on the SRRS and similar
instruments to a variety of physical
illnesses. The same stressor
does
have
different meanings for
different people. Because of this
variability, many experts
believe stress
must
be defined by the combination of an event
plus each individual's reaction to
it.
2-
Stress as Appraisal of Life
Events
i-
Richard Lazarus defined
stress by the individual's appraisal
(perception) of a challenging life
event. Your
primary
appraisal is
your
assessment of the
challenge, threat, or harm posed by
a
particular
event. Your secondary
appraisal is
your
assessment of
your abilities and resources
for
coping
with that event. The
appraisal approach recognizes
that the same event is more or
less stressful
for
different people.
ii-
The renowned American physiologist Walter Cannon, one
of the first and foremost
stress
researchers,
recognized the adaptive, evolutionary
aspects of stress. Cannon viewed
stress as the
activation
of the fight
or flight response. The
fight or flight response has
obvious survival value.
Cannon
observed, however, that fight or
flight is a maladaptive
reaction to
much stress in the modern
world
such as being reprimanded by your boss or
giving a speech before a large
audience.
Psychophysiological
Responses to Stress
Physiologically,
the fight or flight response
activates your sympathetic
nervous system: Your
heart and
respiration
rates increase, blood
pressure rises, your pupils
dilate, blood sugar levels
elevate, and your
blood
flow is redirected in preparation for
muscular activity. When a
perceived threat registers in the
cortex,
it signals,
the
brain structure primarily
responsible for activating the stress
response, which in
turn
secretes a hormone that
stimulates the brainstem to activate the
sympathetic nervous system.
In
response
to the sympathetic arousal, the adrenal
glands release
two key hormones.
·
One is
commonly known as adrenaline,
which activates the sympathetic
nervous system.
·
The
second key adrenal hormone
is cortisol, often
called the "stress hormone"
because its release
is
so closely linked with
stress.
One
function of cortisol is "containment" of
pathogens in the body. In fact,
research in this area
has
started
a new field of study, psychoneuroimmunology
(PNI), the investigation
of the relation
between
stress and immune function. PNI
research shows that particularly
vulnerable to stress are T
cells,
one of
the two major types of lymphocytes,
white
blood cells that fight
off antigens,
foreign
substances
like
bacteria that invade the body.
Decreased T cell production
makes the body more
susceptible to
infectious
diseases during times of
stress. Recent evidence
suggests that stress
may both inhibit and
enhance
immune functioning.
Short-term
stressors and physical threats
enhance certain immune responses,
particularly
aspects
of
immune functioning that respond
quickly, require little energy,
and may contain infection
due to an
injury.
When repeated over the time,
your physiological reactions to stress
can leave you vulnerable
to
illness.
Cannon
hypothesized
this occurs because intense or chronic
stress overwhelms the body's
homeostasis
(a term he
coined), the tendency to return to a
steady state of normal
functioning. He
suggested
that, over time, the prolonged
arousal of the sympathetic nervous
system eventually damages
the
body, because it no longer returns to
its normal resting
state.
Canadian
physiologist Hans
Selye offered
a different hypothesis based on
his concept of the
general
adaptation syndrome (GAS). Seyle's
GAS consists of three
stages: alarm, resistance,
and
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exhaustion.
The stage of alarm
occurs
first and involves the
mobilization of the body in reaction
to
threat.
The stage of resistance
comes
next and is a period of time
during which the body is
physiologically
activated
and prepared to respond to the threat.
Exhaustion
is the
final stage, and it occurs
if the body's
resources
are depleted by chronic stress.
Selye viewed the stage of
exhaustion as the key in the
development
of physical illness from
stress. At this stage, the body is
damaged by continuous failed
attempts
to reactivate the GAS. Stress
may create physical illness
in both ways, but a third
mechanism
may
be as important. Because the stress
response uses so much
energy, the body may not be
able to
perform
many routine functions, such as storing
energy or repairing injuries. The result
is greater
susceptibility
to illness.
Coping
Two
general coping strategies are
problem-focused and emotion-focused coping.
Problem-focused
coping involves
attempts to change a
stressor.
Emotion-focused
coping is an attempt to
alter internal distress.
Studies
of animals and humans show
that predictability
and
control
can
dramatically reduce stress.
Even
the
illusion
of
control can help to
alleviate stress in humans.
However, the perception of control
can
increase
stress when people believe they
can exercise control but
fail to do so, or when they lose
control
over
a formerly controllable stressor. In
short, control alleviates stress when it
can be exercised or
even
when
it is illusory, but failed
attempts at control intensify
stress. Research also
indicates that responding
with
physical activity reduces physiological
reactions to stress.
Repression
is one
form of emotion-focused coping that can
be maladaptive physically.
Psychophysiological
reactions to stress also are
greater for "defensive deniers"--people
who report
positive
mental health but whom
clinicians judge to have
emotional problems.
Optimism
Optimism
is a basic key to effective coping.
People with an optimistic coping
style have a positive
attitude
toward
dealing with stress, even
when it cannot be changed, while
pessimists are defeated from
the outset.
Positive
thinking is linked with better health
habits and less illness in
general, and for those
with heart
disease,
AIDS and other serious
physical illnesses. For many
people, religious and philosophical beliefs
are
essential
to cope with stress. Emerging
evidence demonstrates the health value of
religious practices, for
example,
mortality risk is lower among
those who attend church
services, probably as a result of
improved
health
behavior.
Health
Behavior
Stress
may also cause illness
indirectly by disrupting healthy
behavior. Health
behavior is action
that
promotes
good health, including positive
efforts like eating,
sleeping, and exercising
adequately and
avoiding
unhealthy activities such as cigarette
smoking, excessive alcohol consumption,
and drug use.
Illness
behavior--behaving as if
you are sick--also appears
to be stress related. Considerable
research
indicates
that increased stress is
correlated with such illness
behaviors as making more frequent
office
visits
to physicians or allowing chronic pain to
interfere with everyday
activities. Social
support is
important
in coping with stress. Social
support not only can
encourage positive health behavior,
but
research
shows that social support
can have direct, physiological benefits.
Of all potential sources
of
social
support--or conflict--a good
marriage may be most critical to
physical health.
Illness
as a Cause of Stress
Stress
can cause illness, but
illness also causes stress.
Helping children, adults, and
families cope with
chronic
illness is another important role of
experts in behavioral medicine.
Historically, the only
physical
illnesses thought to be affected by
stress were a few psychosomatic
disorders, such as
ulcers
and
asthma. The field of
psychosomatic medicine was dominated by
psychoanalytic psychiatrists
who
endorsed
the idea that specific personality
types caused specific
psychosomatic diseases.
At
the beginning of the twentieth century, infectious
diseases were the most common
causes of death in
the
United States. Thanks to
advances in medical science,
and especially in public health,
far fewer
people
are dying of infectious diseases at the
beginning of the twenty-first century.
Today, most of the
leading
causes of death are
lifestyle
diseases that
are affected in many ways by
stress and health
behavior.
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