Brian T. Yates, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Department of Psychology
323A Asbury Building
The American University
Washington, DC 20016-8062
Voice: 202-885-1727 (& 24-hour voice mail), 301-942-8594 (home & fax: no papers, please).
E-mail: BrianYates@aol.com (there's no space between "Brian" and "Yates" in this address).
Facilitation of traditional medical services is the next focus of the course. Several classes detail methods that psychological researchers and care providers have developed and used to help people:
As we delve deeper into the sort of medical services that psychology can facilitate, you will gain an increased understanding appreciation for the cost and suffering involved in the medical treatment of health problems. Investigation of psychological alternatives to medical methods of dealing with, for example, chronic pain and sleep disorders, makes even clearer what most of us prefer to ignore: health problems produce a terrible, frightening loss of human dignity and years of productive living. This realization is the best argument ever for the prevention of these medical problems--which is where psychology has the greatest potential to free people from debilitating illness and premature death.
There are, of course, uncertainties about the effectiveness of current psychological theory and methods for changing some of the most life-threatening behaviors of all. The research described throughout this course acknowledges this uncertainty while showing how we can quantify it and reduce it through repeated cycles of investigation, theorization, and practice. There is real and demonstrated promise here for reductions in unnecessary illness and in premature deaths. Join me in seeking answers to questions that are deeply and personally important for us as individuals, for our society, and for our world.
| EPIDEMIOLOGY: CAUSES OF HEALTH, MORBIDITY, AND MORTALITY | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | 18 | Th | Introduction to health psychology, course structure, | |
| Jan | 22 | M | Morbidity and mortality. Reading: Syllabus, Taylor Ch. 1. | |
| Jan | 25 | Th | Behavioral and other epidemiology of morbidity and mortality. Syllabus, Taylor Ch. 1. Video: "Who's Killing Calvert City?" (call #: VHS 885, 60 min.). http://www.cs.brown.edu/people/lsh/smoking.html | |
| Jan | 29 | M | Demographics and health. Internet: pollution and health. | |
| Feb | 1 | Th | Personality and sickness. Reading: Taylor Ch. 7. Internet: personality and health. | |
| Feb | 5 | M | Stress and immune system effectiveness for exogenous agents. Videos: "The Immune Response" (call #: VHS 1010; 20 min.). Internet: immunology. Site: http://www.cts.com/~health/ | |
| Feb | 8 | Th | Stress and immune system effectiveness for endogenous agents. Reading: Taylor Ch. 15. Internet: stress. | |
| Feb | 12 | M | Psychoneuroendocrinimmunology. | |
| Feb | 15 | Th | Exam 1: Epidemiologies of morbidity and mortality. | |
| PSYCHOLOGY FOR MEDICINE: FACILITATING TREATMENT AND SERVICE DELIVERY | ||||
| Feb | 19 | M | Where it all beings: Systems of the human body. Taylor Ch. 2. Taylor Ch. 2. Internet: human body. CD-ROM: BodyWorks or Adam: The Inside Story. (may be available in the library) | |
| Feb | 22 | Th | Public and private medical service systems: Current status. Internet: National Health Insurance. | |
| Feb | 26 | M | Early detection of health problems. Reading: Taylor Ch. 9, Ch. 5 (pp. 141-145). Internet: breast self-examination or testicular self-examination. Sites: http://nysernet.org/bcic/self/breast-exam.html, http://nysernet.org/bcic/self/guide-lumps.html, http://nysernet.org/bcic/self/how-much.html, http://nysernet.org/bcic/self/prevent.html, | |
| Feb | 29 | Th | Facilitating outpatient treatments I. Reading: Taylor Ch. 10. CPR, First aid: http://www.symnet.net/Users/afoster | |
| Mar | 4 | M | Facilitating outpatient treatments II. Video: Heart attack (call # VHS 1008, 27 min.) Internet: surgery preparation. http://indy.radiology.uiowa.edu/Patients/ICU/3Kids3Clouds.html | |
| Mar | 7 | Th | Facilitating inpatient treatments I. Taylor Ch. 11. Internet: recovery from surgery. http://www.infi.net/washmag/health/index.html | |
| Mar | 11 | M | Spring Break: Be Healthy (without class). | |
| Mar | 14 | Th | Spring Break (some more) | |
| Mar | 18 | M | Facilitating inpatient treatments II. | |
| Mar | 21 | Th | Pain management. Reading: Taylor Ch. 12. Internet: pain management | |
| Mar | 25 | M | Exam 2: Better medicine through psychology. | |
| PSYCHOLOGICAL SERVICES: ADJUNCTS AND ALTERNATIVES TO TRADITIONAL MEDICINE; & PREVENTION | ||||
| Mar | 29 | Th | The goal: To return the patient to productivity and life. Reading: Taylor Ch. 12. | |
| Apr | 1 | M | Coping with severe and chronic health problems. Reading: Taylor Ch. 14 (pp. 521-533). Video: "Herpes, the Evasive Invader" (call #: VHS 1009, 16 min.). Internet: chronic health, herpes, (for breast cancer updates:) http://cancer.med.upenn.edu/gyn_onc/ovarian/boyd.html | |
| Apr | 4 | Th | Terminal health problems. Reading: Taylor Ch. 13. Internet: HIV. | |
| Apr | 8 | M | Prevention concepts and prevention strategies, Health risk assessment. Reading: Taylor, Ch. 3. Internet: health risk assessment. | |
| Apr | 11 | Th | Techniques for modifying health behaviors I. Reading: Taylor, Ch. 4, Ch. 5 (except for pp. 141-145 read previously). Internet: health fitness. | |
| Apr | 15 | M | Mitigating health-compromising behaviors. Reading: Taylor, Ch. 6. Internet: smoking | |
| Apr | 18 | Th | Mitigating more health-compromising behaviors. Reading: Taylor, Ch. 8. [Last day to turn in Self-Health Paper for extra (+3) credit] | |
| Apr | 22 | M | Self-Health Paper due (in class, at start of class). Modifying personality and the environment for better health. | |
| Apr | 25 | Th | The future of health psychology. Reading: Taylor, Ch. 16. Internet: health psychology. Site: http://www.apa.org. | |
| Apr | 29 | M | Exam 3: Prevention is the cure | |
| May | 2 | Th | Finals in progress... (no class) | |
| May | 6 | M | Course Closure Meeting. Exam 3 returned, Self-Health Paper returned, course grade available, in our regular classroom (11:20 am-12:35 pm only). I will leave before 12:35 if all students present have received their papers, scores, and grades. This is the only time to pick up your paper, see your exam, and learn your course grade, so mark it on your calendar now! (It's when our Final Exam is scheduled.) If you can't make this meeting, please don't ask me for your paper, scores, or grade. | |
(Count the number of Short Essay questions you answer carefully: if you answer only 2, you can't get credit for the unanswered third question! Also, only the first three Short Essay questions will be graded.)
Your paper also must be turned in on the day it is due, in class, at the start of class, or it will be scored zero. There is absolutely no acceptable reason for turning in a paper late. I urge you to turn in your paper early. Papers submitted in the lecture room one or more lectures early will receive 3 extra points. Because papers slid under my door and placed in my mailbox sometimes have not been found, please submit your paper to me in person in class.
As a safeguard, and for your future reference, please retain a copy of your Paper.
Carefully following this outline for your paper. Type in these headings to make the structure of your paper explicit. Papers are scored according to the parenthesized point values for each section, for a total of 0 to 100 points.
Do not spend time or space describing the various body systems. Do not review the epidemiology of physical disorders for the different body systems. Address instead your risks and what you can do about them.
If you feel that description of some body systems, family history, or behaviors is too personal, then simply write a sentence to that effect. Be sure to include some mention of the body system and problem, or I'll have to conclude that you've neglected it.
| Family Member (and relationship to you) | Current Age or Age at Death | Health Problems/Morbidity (indicate ages) | if deceased: Cause of Death | Health-Hindering Habits | Health-Enhancing Habits |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ____ | ____ | ____ | ____ | ____ | ____ |
| ____ | ____ | ____ | ____ | ____ | ____ |
These plans should address each of the major risks identified in areas I.A. through I.I. above.
For all portions of section II, please describe not just what you'll change, but how you'll make that change, by using psychological techniques. Supply the terms for, and describe the specific techniques you'll use, and how you'll integrate them into a program of self-managed health improvement maintenance. The program should be life-long; include in your descriptions ways of making the program last through relapses and life changes.
Be sure to explain how the different body systems that you write about in Section I. will be affected, positively or negative, by implementation of the plans detailed in this section.
| If ________ happens or shows up or occurs | Then I will seek the professional services of ______________. |
|---|---|
| _____ | _____ |
| _____ | _____ |
Papers must be completely original: they must be your own writing, done for the first time for this course. All material drawn from other sources, whether a direct quote or a paraphrasing (a "putting in your own words") must be placed within quotation marks and must be followed immediately by a reference citation (a footnote or citation with a References section at the end of your paper). To do otherwise is plagiarism, which is a violation of the Academic Integrity Code of The American University.
All suspected plagiarism, including paraphrasing without quotation marks and without reference citation, will be reported to the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences with a recommendation for disciplinary action.
All illnesses must be certified by a health professional (ideally, a physician) in writing within one week of the missed exam. I reserve the right to contact the health professional personally, and to reject any certification. The Student Health Center does not appear to issue such certifications; you should be sick enough to require the care of a physician off campus.
Missed exams not qualifying as "make-ups" will receive a zero score. Also, no "early" exams can be given. Students who have been acknowledged to have a valid reason to take the make-up examination will take a different exam covering the same material that the missed exam would have covered. Because of difficulties in proctoring "make-up" exams, this make-up exam will be given during the time scheduled for the course final exam, in the regular class meeting room. See me for details.
If you have a learning disability, please provide documentation of it from the Office of Student Life within the first two weeks of the semester so we can arrange alternative testing situations. Please also bring your disability to my attention during the first week of class.
I look forward to teaching you Health Psychology!
| CAS | | | Psychology | | | Student Info. | | | Syllabi | | | 57.333.01 |
Created by: Dr. Brian Yates (byates@american.edu)