The Instability Of Health Cognitions: Visceral States Influence Self-Efficacy And Related Health Beliefs

HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY(2008)

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摘要
Objective: To determine how visceral impulses, such as hunger and drug craving. influence health beliefs. Design: The authors assessed smokers' self-efficacy and intentions to quit while in a randomly assigned state of cigarette craving or noncraving (Study 1), and assessed dieters weight-loss beliefs while hungry or satiated (Study 2). Main outcome measures: Self-efficacy, smoking cessation, weight-loss goals. Results: The authors found, in both tire context of smoking and weight-loss, that participants in a cold (e.g., satiated) stale had different health beliefs than participants in a hot state (e.g., hungry). Specifically. in Study 1, the authors found that snickers who experienced cigarette craving had lower self-efficacy than did satiated smokers. Consequently, smokers who craved a cigarette had less intention to quit smoking in the future compared with satiated smokers. In Study 2, the authors found that hungry dieters had less self-efficacy than did satiated dieters. This difference led hungry dieters to form less ambitious future weight-loss goals and view prior weight-loss attempts with more satisfaction. Conclusion: These findings contribute to our understanding of the nature of health belief's and reveal that health belief's are more dynamic than previously assumed.
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关键词
hunger, smoking cessation, self-efficacy, health goals
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