The Psychology of Lifestyle: Promoting Healthy Behaviour

Front Cover
Routledge, May 7, 2009 - Medical - 336 pages

Improving lifestyles is thought to be one of the most effective means of reducing mortality and morbidity in the developed world. However, despite decades of health promotion, there has been no significant difference to lifestyles and instead there are rising levels of inactivity and obesity.

The Psychology of Lifestyle addresses the role psychology can play in reversing the trend of deleterious lifestyle choices. It considers the common characteristics of lifestyle behaviours and reflects on how we can inform and improve interventions to promote healthy lifestyles. Health promotion has taught people what a healthy lifestyle is – now we need to enable people to live that life. The chapters cover key lifestyle behaviours that impact on health –smoking, eating, physical activity, drinking, sex and drug use – as well as combinations of behaviours. Each chapter contains interventions that have been developed to influence and promote lifestyle change among patients and clients.

This unique book will enable readers to develop a clear theoretical and practical grasp of the psychological principles involved in all aspects of lifestyle change. It is an invaluable resource for students and professionals committed to health promotion within all health-related disciplines.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
1 Conceptualising lifestyle psychology
6
2 Theories of change
25
3 Eating
49
4 Physical activity
85
5 Drinking
111
6 Smoking
143
7 Sex
178
8 Illicit drug misuse
204
9 Evaluating lifestyle psychology
235
10 Strategies for the twentyfirst century
258
References
270
Index
317
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases