BPS Model of Health
BPS Model of Health
BPS Model of Health
Introductory Chapter:
Bio-Psychosocial Model of Health
Simon George Taukeni
1. Introduction
2. Definitions
2.1 Health
Kazarian and Evans [2] suggest that people commonly think about health in
terms of an absence of (1) objective signs that the body is not functioning properly
and (2) subjective symptoms of disease or injury, such as pain or nausea. World
Health Organization defined health as ‘a state of complete physical, mental and
social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity’ (WHO, 1946
cited in [3]:4). Some health psychologists defined health as a positive state of
physical, mental and social well-being not simply the absence of injury or disease
that varies over time along a continuum [4]. At the wellness end of the continuum,
health is the dominant state. At the other end of the continuum, the dominant state
is illness or injury, in which destructive processes produce characteristic signs,
symptoms or disabilities [4]. For further detail, see Figure 1.
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Psychology of Health - Biopsychosocial Approach
etiologic and diagnostic correlates of health, illness and related dysfunction, and the
analysis and improvement of the health care system and health policy formation.
• Identify the causes and diagnosis correlates of health, illness and related
dysfunction
Although most of us are familiar with the need to engage in these health behav-
iours, only a few of us actually do so, and that is what we need to work on to remind
people of adopting a better health lifestyles. Many other researchers such as Berg
(1976 as cited in Pitts, 1998) asserted that most people are aware of which health
behaviours should be engaged in; however, they frequently do not do so, and they
instead do engage in activities which they know to be harmful to their health. It is
this cantankerousness which psychologists have spent a great deal of time examin-
ing. The dilemma for health psychologists is to explain why some or many people do
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Introductory Chapter: Bio-Psychosocial Model of Health
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.85024
Figure 1.
Health (source: adopted from Sarafino [4]).
not do what they know is in their own best interest to do and why some people are
more amenable to the adoption of healthy habits than others.
This chapter is therefore in support of a consistent focus on the role of knowl-
edge in informing people of the risks to themselves that certain behaviours can
engender. Pitts [3] reported studies that examining a range of issues relevant to
health such as smoking, drug-taking, medical checks and adopting safer sex have
fairly consistently shown that knowledge, by itself, does not lead to behaviour
change. The only question left to ask is: So what is required, other than knowledge,
to persuade people to look after their health? This question is the guiding principle
to understand the role of health psychology in persuading people to look after their
health informed by bio-psychosocial model.
It is generally recognized that there are two models of health, namely, biomedi-
cal and bio-psychosocial models. Biomedical model focuses on treatment and
elimination of symptoms, while bio-psychosocial model focuses on individual’s per-
ception of their symptoms and how they and their families respond to symptoms
they are experiencing [6]. Also Deacon [7] asserts that under the biomedical model,
illnesses were understood as having physiological aetiologies that were diagnosed
through distinct biochemical markers and were to be treated through physical inter-
ventions. This chapter however is primarily focusing only on the bio-psychosocial
models of health. Its founder, Engel [8], discovered that bio-psychosocial model rep-
resents the contribution of biological, psychological and social factors in determining
health. Table 1 shows the differences between the two models.
Within health psychology one model that has enjoyed considerable popularity is
the ‘stress-diathesis’ model (Steptoe cited in [3]) which is currently called bio-
psychosocial model. This model was first described by G.L. Engel in 1977. It empha-
sizes the interactive effect of environment and individual vulnerability (genetic and
psychological characteristics) factors upon health [3]. According to bio-psychosocial
model, psychological, physical and social threats present demands upon an individual’s
resources and capacity for coping which give rise to physiological reactions involving
the autonomic nervous system (ANS) and endocrine and immune system of the body.
The effects include both short-term and long-term components, and these may
have consequences on health depending upon the individual’s predisposition or
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Psychology of Health - Biopsychosocial Approach
What is the The mind and body function The focus is on an interaction between
relationship independently of each other. In other the mind and the body. The mind and
between the mind words, the mind and body are separate body interact
and the body? entities
What is the role Illness may have psychological Psychological factors not only as
of psychology consequences, but not psychological possible consequences of illness but as
in health and causes (e.g. cancer may cause contributing to it at all stages along the
illness? unhappiness, but mood is not seen continuum from healthy to being ill
as related to either the onset or
progression of the cancer)
Table 1.
Comparing biomedical and bio-psychosocial models of health.
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Introductory Chapter: Bio-Psychosocial Model of Health
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.85024
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Psychology of Health - Biopsychosocial Approach
3. Conclusion
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