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Page 1: Transtheoretical Model and Physical Activity

Transtheoretical Model and Physical Activity

EPHE 348

Page 2: Transtheoretical Model and Physical Activity

Origins

• Basic linear theories were not explaining health behavior completely

• Market segmentation and intervention tailoring?

• Clinical observations of smokers indicated different stages of readiness (Prochaska & DiClemente, 1983)

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Stages of Change• The novel concept in the model

• Behavior change unfolds through 5 different stages

• Individuals use different processes or strategies at different times

• Each stage has different needs and requires different strategies (i.e., stage matched interventions)

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Maintenance

Preparation

Precontemplation

Action

Contemplation

Stages of Change

Spiral pattern represents the dynamic forwards and backwards movement through the stages.

Termination

Figure 15.1

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Constructs of the Transtheoretical Model

• Processes of Change - behavioral (changes in behavior) or cognitive/experiential (changes in thinking)

• Decisional balance

• Self-efficacy

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Processes of Change

• 10 Cognitive and behavioural strategies to enact/cause the change

• Research – behavioral processes are correlates of PA, but the transitional nature across the stages is not well established (Plotnikoff et al., 2001)

• Processes are not well-measured/defined and may not be complete

Page 7: Transtheoretical Model and Physical Activity

Behavioral Processes of Change• 1) Counter-conditioning: substituting

alternative healthy behaviors for unhealthy ones

• 2) Helping Relationships – seeking/using social support networks for behavior change

• 3) Contingency management – increasing rewards for a positive behavior and decreasing ones for a negative behavior

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Behavioral Processes of Change

• 4) Self-liberation – making a firm commitment to change (e.g., written contract)

• 5) Stimulus control – removing reminders or cues for unhealthy behaviors and adding ones for healthy behaviors

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Cognitive Processes of Change

• 1) Consciousness raising – learning new facts & tips about healthy behavior change

• 2) Dramatic relief – experiencing negative emotions that go with unhealthy behavioral risks

• 3) Self-reevaluation – realizing the change is part of one’s identity

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Cognitive Processes of Change• 4) Environmental-reevaluation –

realizing that the impact of the behavior on one’s social and physical environment

• 5) Social-liberation – realizing the social norms are changing in favor of the healthy behavior

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Decisional Balance• Pros vs Cons

• Cons are high in early stages

• Pros become higher in later stages

• Decisional balance less important in later stages

• Research – not really the case (Spencer et al., 2006)

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Self-Efficacy

• Confidence to continue the healthy behavior and overcome temptations

• Self-efficacy should increase across the stages of change

• Research – self-efficacy is the most validated across the stages of change

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Advantages of the TTM

• The notion of tailoring / market segmentation is actually addressed

• Risk populations can be subdivided

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Problems

• No structure among constructs (describe but not explain)

• Stage matched interventions have mixed results (Spencer, 2006)

• 6 studies on the topic• 1/6 shows support for tailoring

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Sutton (2000)

• Stages need to be distinct• Clear differences across stage• Order of process across stages

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Beyond Stages (Rhodes & Plotnikoff, 2006; Rhodes et al., 2008)

Predicting Physical Activity 27

Table 4 Transtheoretical Model Constructs as Predictors of Action Planning and Control Across Six-Month Measurements. Correlation with Intention-Behavior Profiles F4,1168 Post Hocs discriminant

function NI UA SA UM SM

Pros .11 3.36 (1.01) 3.70 (0.74) 3.85 (0.75) 4.04 (0.78) 4.17 (0.75) 14.44* NI<ALL; UA<UM,SM;

SA<SM

Cons -.23 2.27 (0.58) 2.22 (0.69) 2.08 (0.54) 1.95 (0.65) 1.68 (0.61) 21.46* NI,UA>UM,SM; SA,UM>SM

Behavioral Processes .68 2.01 (0.62) 2.32 (0.66) 2.60 (0.61) 3.13 (0.89) 3.27 (0.86) 61.40* NI<UA<SA<UM,SM Cognitive Processes -.31 2.16 (0.82) 2.84 (0.69) 3.00 (0.68) 3.09 (0.77) 3.11 (0.66) 9.07* NI<All; UA<UM,SM Self-Efficacy .54 2.45 (0.58) 2.54 (0.60) 2.79 (0.72) 3.15 (0.74) 3.67 (0.74) 75.20* NI,UA<SA<UM<SM Note: *=p<.01. Post hoc tests performed at p < .01. NI = nonintenders, UA = unsuccessful adopters, SA = successful adopters, UM = unsuccessful maintainers, SM = successful maintainers.

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Application Exercise• Assume that you are a health

professional and a client in the preparation/action stage has come to you for help

• Develop an exercise intervention technique (or series of techniques) for each behavioral process of change (be creative!)


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