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- The Common-Sense Model of self-regulation of health and . . .
A novel feature of Leventhal’s proposition was to delineate the active parallel cognitive processing of how people regulate their responses both to ‘illness danger’ (‘What is this health threat, what can I objectively do about it?’) and to the person’s regulation of ‘emotional control’ (‘How do I feel about it, what can I do
- Self Regulation Model - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics
The self-regulation model captures the influence of the complex interaction between individual and socio-cultural factors on health behaviors However, this model has not provided much information to help develop interventions to promote health behaviors
- Leventhal’s self-regulatory model of illness behaviour
The framework offered by Leventhal’s self-regulatory model of illness behaviour incorporates cognitive, emotional and environmental responses to a health threat The factors that were identified from the literature as contributors to patient pre-hospital delay, fit within these three main categories of influence
- Full Article | Society of Behavioral Medicine (SBM)
In contrast, we attempted to capture the operation of the mechanisms underlying health related actions Our early studies were published under the “self-regulation” banner, and relabeled four decades ago, as suggested by Marie Johnston, as the “Common-Sense Model (CSM)”
- The Common-Sense Model of Self-Regulation (CSM): a dynamic . . .
The Common-Sense Model of Self-Regulation (the "Common-Sense Model", CSM) is a widely used theoretical framework that explicates the processes by which patients become aware of a health threat, navigate affective responses to the threat, formulate perceptions of the threat and potential treatment ac …
- The common-sense model of self-regulation of health and illness.
In L D Cameron H Leventhal (Eds ), The self-regulation of health and illness behaviour (pp 42–65) Routledge Examines the nature of self-regulation as it applies to the enactment of health and illness behaviors The chapter begins by defining self-regulation
- Illness Representations | Division of Cancer Control and . . .
Illness representations are central to Leventhal's Self-Regulation Theory (Leventhal, 1970; Leventhal, Meyer, Nerenz, 1980) Self-regulation theory postulates that illness representations determine a person's appraisal of an illness situation and health behavior
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