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Health
Psychology PSY408
VU
LESSON
06
HEALTH
RELATED CAREERS
Health-related
careers outside of Psychology
The
process of providing care
for a patient who is suffering
from a chronic illness, serious
injury or
disability
involves a variety of professionals
working together with physicians as a
team. Each
professional
has
specific training for a
special role in the treatment or
rehabilitation process. Most of them
have some
education
in psychology. We've already seen
how health psychologists can play a role.
Let's look at some
careers
outside of psychology and the
training they require in the United
States.
Nurses
and Physician Assistants
There
are two overall categories
of nurses registered
nurses (RNs)
and licensed
practical nurses (LPNs).
RNs
work in hospitals, community health
clinics, physicians' offices, and
industrial settings. They
assess and
record
patients' symptoms and progress, conduct
tests, administer medications,
assist in rehabilitation,
provide
instructions for self-treatment, and
instruct patients and their
Families in ways to improve
or
maintain
their health. RNs often deal
with mental and emotional
aspects of the patient as well. All
RNs
throughout
the United States must be
licensed to practice, have
graduated from an approved
training
program
in nursing, and have passed
a national examination. RN training
programs vary in structure
and
length;
college and university programs
take 4 or 5 years and lead
to a baccalaureate degree.
LPNs
work in hospitals, clinics,
physicians' offices, and patients'
homes. They perform nursing
activities
that
require less training than
those performed by RNs. For
example, they take and
record temperatures
and
blood
pressures, administer certain
medications, change dressings,
assist physicians or RNs,
and help
patients
with personal hygiene. Like
RNs. all LPNs in the United
States must be licensed to
practice, have
graduated
from an approved practical nursing program,
and have passed a national
examination. Training
programs
for LPNs take about a
year to complete and are
offered through various
types of institutions,
such
as trade and vocational schools,
community and junior colleges,
and hospitals.
Physicians'
assistants
and
nurse
practitioners usually
work closely with medical
doctors, performing
routine
tasks that physicians
ordinarily did in the past,
such as examining patients with
symptoms that do
not
appear serious and
explaining treatment details (AANP,
2000; AAPA, 2000). Training
involves a
program
of about 2 years of study; admission
often requires that
applicants have a relevant
bachelors
degree,
such as in nursing, and
prior health care
experience.
Dietitians
Dietitians
study and apply knowledge about
food and its effect on the
body. They do this in a variety of
settings,
such as hospitals, clinics, nursing
homes, colleges, and
schools. Some dietitians are
administrators;
other
work directly with patients
in assessing nutritional needs,
implementing and evaluating dietary
plans,
and
instructing patients and their
families on ways to adhere to
needed diets after discharge
from the
hospital.
Some dietitians work for
social service agencies in the
community, where they counsel people
on
nutritional
practices to help maintain health and
speed recovery when they are
ill.
Becoming
a dietitian requires a bachelor's or
masters degree specializing in
nutrition sciences or
institutional
management.
To become a Registered Dietitian, the
Individual must complete a
supervised internship
and
pass
an exam.
Physical
Therapists
Many
patients need help in restoring
functional movement to parts of their
body and relieving pain. If
they
have
suffered a disabling injury or disease,
treatment may be needed to prevent or
limit permanent
disability.
Physical therapists
plan
and apply treatment for these
goals in rehabilitation (APTA.
2000).
To
plan the treatment, physical therapists review the
patient's records and perform
tests or measure-
merits
of
muscle strength, motor
coordination, endurance, and
range of motion of the injured
body part.
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Psychology PSY408
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Treatment
is designed to increase the strength
and function of the injured
part and aid in the
patient's
adaptation
to have reduced physical abilities,
which may be quite drastic.
People who have suffered
severe
strokes
are sometimes left partially
paralyzed, for
instance.
The
most universal technique used in
physical therapy involves exercise,
generally requiring little
effort
initially
and becoming more and
more challenging. Another technique
involves electrical stimulation to
move
paralyzed muscles or reduce pain.
Physical therapists also give
instructions for carrying out
everyday
tasks,
such as tying shoelaces or
cooking meals. If the patient
needs to use adaptive
devices, such as
crutches
or prosthesis (replacement limb), the
therapist provides training.
All
physical therapists throughout the
United States must have a
degree or certificate from an
approved
training
program and be licensed by passing an
exam. A bachelor's degree
has been the minimum
educational
requirement to enter the profession, but
a master's degree in physical therapy
will be the
minimum
as of January 2002.
Occupational
Therapists
Occupational
therapists help
physically, mentally, and emotionally
disabled individuals gain
skills needed for
daily
activities in a work setting, at
school, in the community, and at
home. Their patients are
often people
who
had these skills at one
time, but lost them because of a spinal
cord injury or a disease.
These
professionals
usually specialize in working
with a particular age group, such as the
elderly, and a type of
disability--
physical, for example. Based
on the patient's age and the type and
degree of disability, a
program
of educational, vocational, and
recreational activities is designed
and implemented. The program
for
a child, for instance, might
involve academic tasks and
crafts; for an adult, it might
involve typing,
driving
a vehicle, and using hand
and power tools.
Occupational
therapists in the United States
must have a degree or certificate
from an approved training
program
and be licensed by passing an
exam. Training requires completing a
baccalaureate program plus
either
a certificate program or a master's degree in
occupational therapy.
Social
Workers
The
field of social
work is
quite broad. Probably most social
workers are employed in
mental health
programs,
but many others work in
hospitals, nursing homes, rehabilitation
centers, and public
health
programs.
When working with people who
are physically ill or
disabled, social workers
help patients and
their
families make psychological
and social adjustments to the
illness and obtain needed
community
services,
including income maintenance.
Thus, social workers may
arrange for needed nursing
care at home
after
a patient leaves the hospital or refer a
patient for vocational counseling
and occupational therapy if the
illness
or disability requires a career
change. These professionals
are usually called medical
social workers.
Training
requires a bachelor's degree in a
social science field,
usually social work, but
often a degree in
psychology
or sociology is sufficient. Most states
mandate some form of
licensing or certification.
Many
positions
require an advanced degree, typically a
master's in social work, the MSW
degree.
Why
is the field of Health Psychology
needed?
A
number of trends within medicine,
psychology, and other health care
systems have combined to make
the
emergence
of health psychology inevitable. It is safe to
say that health psychology is
one of the most
important
developments within the field of
psychology in the last 50 years.
What factors have led to
the
development
of health psychology?
Changing
Patterns of Illness
The
most important factor giving
rise to health psychology has
been the change in illness
patterns that has
occurred
in the United States and
other technologically advanced
societies.
As
we discussed in our earlier
lecture, until the 20th century, the
major causes of illness and
death in the
United
States were acute disorders--especially
tuberculosis, pneumonia, and other
infectious diseases.
Acute
disorders are short-term medical
illnesses, often the result of a
viral or bacterial invader and
usually
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Psychology PSY408
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amenable
to cure. Now, however, chronic illnesses--
especially heart disease,
cancer, and diabetes--are
the
main
contributors to disability and
death. Chronic illnesses are
slowly developing diseases with
which
people
live for a long time. Often,
chronic illnesses cannot be cured but
rather only managed by the
patient
and
provider working together.
Why
have chronic illnesses helped spawn the
field of health psychology? First, these
are diseases in which
psychological
and social factors are
implicated as causes. For example,
personal health habits such as
diet
and
smoking are implicated in the development of heart
disease and cancer, and
sexual activity is critically
important
in the likelihood of developing AIDS
(acquired immune deficiency syndrome).
Consequently,
health
psychology has evolved, in part, to explore
these causes and develop
ways to modify them.
Second,
because people may live with
chronic diseases for many
years, psychological issues
arise in
connection
with them. Health
psychologists help the chronically ill
adjust psychologically and
socially to
their
changing health state.
They
help those with chronic
illness develop treatment regimens, many
of which involve self-care.
Chronic
illnesses
affect family functioning, including
relationships with a partner and / or
children, and health
psychologists
both explore these changes
and help ease the problems
in family functioning that
may result.
Many
people with chronic illnesses use
unconventional therapies outside
formal medicine. Understanding
what
leads people to seek unconventional
treatments and evaluating their
effectiveness are also
issues on
which
health psychologists can shed
light.
The
field of health psychology is changing
almost daily because new
issues arise that require the
input of
psychologists.
For example, new
technologies now make it
possible to identify the genes
that contribute to
many
disorders. Just in the past
five years, genes
contributing to many diseases,
including breast
cancer,
have
been uncovered.
How
can we help a college
student whose mother has
just been diagnosed with
breast cancer? Now that
we
have
a better understanding of the genetic
causes of breast cancer, we
can evaluate the student's
own risk
factor
of contacting the same disease. We can
have different tests that
may tell us about the student's risk
of
breast
cancer. And if the results
tell us that she is indeed
vulnerable to the same disease, we can
design early
prevention
plans for her to reduce the
risk. We can also enhance
her psychological coping abilities so
that
her
risk is further reduced to a
minimum.
Health
psychologists also conduct research
that identifies the risk factors for a
disease, such as a
high-fat
diet,
and also help people learn
to change their diet and
stick to their resolution. Helping people
make
informed,
appropriate decisions is fundamentally a psychological
task. Advances in genetic
research have
made
it possible to identify carriers of
illness and to test the
fetus for the presence of particular
life-
threatening
or severely debilitating illnesses.
This places some parents in
the position of having to decide
whether
to abort a pregnancy, a wrenching,
difficult decision to
make.
Certain
treatments that may prolong
life have the effect of severely
compromising quality of life.
Increasingly,
patients are asked their
preferences regarding life-sustaining
measures, and they may
require
counseling
in these matters. These are
just a few examples of the increasing
role that patients play
in
fundamental
decisions regarding their health
and illness and its
management and of the help
health
psychologists
can provide in this
process.
Changing
patterns of illness have
been charted and followed by
the field of epidemiology, a discipline
closely
related to health psychology in its
goals and interests.
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Health
Psychology PSY408
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Expanded
Health Care
Services
Another
set of factors that has
contributed to the rise of health
psychology relates to the expansion
of
health
care services. Health care
is the largest service industry in the
United States, and it is
still growing
rapidly.
Americans spend more than
$1,000 billion annually on health--more
than 14 % of their
total
income.
In recent years, the health care industry
has come under increasing scrutiny as we
have realized that
massive
increases in health care costs
have not brought with them
improvement in basic indicators of
quality
of health.
Moreover,
huge disparities exist in the
United States, such that
some individuals enjoy the very best
health
care
available in the world and
others receive little health
care except in emergencies. As of
1994, 37 million
Americans
had no health insurance at all, placing
basic preventive care and
treatment for common illnesses
out
of financial reach. These
are among the developments
that have fueled recent
efforts to reform the
health
care system to provide all
Americans with a basic health
care package; similar to what
already exists in
most
European countries.
Health
psychology represents an important
perspective on these issues
for several reasons. First,
because
cost
containment is so important, health psychology's
main emphasis on prevention--namely,
modifying
people
risky health behaviors before they ever
become ill--has the potential to
reduce the number of
dollars
devoted to the management of illness.
Second, health psychologists have done
substantial research
on
what makes people satisfied or
dissatisfied with their health
care. Thus, they can help in
the design of
user-friendly
health care systems.
Finally,
the health care industry employs many
millions of individuals in a variety of
jobs. Nearly every
individual
in the country has direct contact
with the health care system as a
recipient of services. Thus,
its
impact
on people is enormous. For all
these reasons, then, health has a
substantial social and
psychological
impact
on people, an impact that is
addressed by health psychologists.
Increased
Medical Acceptance
Another
reason for the development of health
psychology is the increasing acceptance
of health
psychologists
within the medical community.
Although health psychologists have
been employed in health
settings
for many years, their
value is increasingly recognized by
physicians and other health
care
professionals.
At one time, the role of health
psychologists in health care was
largely confined to the task
of
administering
tests and interpreting the
test results of individuals
who were suspected of
being
psychologically
disturbed. Like psychiatrists in health
settings, psychologists usually
saw only the `problem
patients'
who were difficult for
medical staff to manage or whose
physical complaints were believed to
be
entirely
psychological in origin.
Now,
however, caregivers are increasingly
recognizing that psychological
and social factors are
always
important
in health and illness. Accordingly, the
role of the psychologist in changing
patent's health habits
and
contributing to treatment is increasingly
acknowledged.
Demonstrated
Contributions to Health
Health
psychology has already
demonstrated that it can
make substantial contributions to health.
Although
these
contributions form the substance of
later lectures in this course, a few
brief examples here
can
illustrate
this point.
As
previously noted, health psychologists have developed
a variety of short-term behavioral interventions
to
address
a wide variety of health-related problems including
managing pain, modifying bad health
habits,
such
as smoking, and managing the
side effects or treatment effects
associated with a range of
chronic
diseases.
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Psychology PSY408
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Techniques
that often take a mere
few hours to teach often
produce years of benefit.
Such interventions,
particularly
those that target risk
factors like diet or
smoking, have contributed to the
actual decline in the
incidence
of some diseases, especially coronary
heart disease.
To
take another example, psychologists
learned many years ago
that informing patients
fully about the
procedures
and sensations involved in
unpleasant medical procedures,
such as surgery, improves
their
adjustment
to those procedures. As a consequence of
these studies, many
hospitals and other
treatment
centers
now routinely prepare
patients for such
procedures. Ultimately, if a discipline is to
flourish, it must
demonstrate
a strong track record, and
health psychology has done precisely
that.
Methodological
Contributions
Health
psychologists make important
methodological contributions to issues of health
and illness. Many of
the
issues that arise in medical
settings demand rigorous research
investigation. Although physicians
and
nurses
receive some methodological and
statistical education, their
training may be inadequate to
conduct
research
on the issues they wish to address
unless they make research
their specialty. The
health
psychologist
can be a valuable member of the
research team by providing the
methodological and statistical
expertise
that is the hallmark of good training in
psychology.
We
will not go into the details
of the different research methods
used in health psychology. Suffice it to
say
at
this point that the research
training that health psychologists
receive in their undergraduate
and graduate
school
experiences makes them valuable
parts of the research teams
that attempt to understand how we
stay
healthy
and why we get
ill.
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