The Health Belief Model (HL IB Psychology)
Revision Note
Written by: Laura Swash
Reviewed by: Lucy Vinson
What is the health belief model?
The health belief model (HBM):
The HBM was developed in the USA in the 1950s-60s
It was becoming apparent that certain behaviours like smoking and being overweight were hazardous to health
Despite the above awareness, people seemed unwilling to change their unhealthy behaviours
Psychologists tried to highlight this resistance to positive behaviour change by using the HBM as an explanatory model
The HBM describes the steps involved in a person deciding on action or inaction regarding their own health:
Perception of the possible seriousness of the potential health problem
Awareness of the risk of them suffering from a health problem
Motivation and responsiveness to internal or external cues to action
Cost-benefit analysis of the benefits of action vs. the risks of inaction
At every step, the individual’s belief in their own self-efficacy will affect their perceptions and their final decision
The decision-making process will also be subject to a person’s personality, background, education and personal history
Thus the HBM is an dispositional explanation of the decision to change behaviour
The Health Belief Model explains individual health decisions as involving a cost-benefit analysis
Dispositional factors & health beliefs
Dispositional factors not only affect health, they also affect health beliefs
Two dispositional factors that influence a person’s beliefs about them developing a health problem and their ability to cope are:
optimism bias
self-efficacy
Optimism bias is linked to risk perception: we overestimate the behaviours we engage in to protect our health and underestimate our bad habits
Optimism bias means that we perceive our risk of developing a certain illness as low and it can prevent us from taking necessary action
Self-efficacy is belief in one’s own ability to change bad habits that may be damaging to health
Ajzen (1985) updated an earlier theory to develop his theory of planned behaviour
The theory of planned behaviour outlines three factors that predict behavioural intentions such as health beliefs:
Attitude towards the healthy behaviour
Subjective norms of those around us towards the behaviour
Self-efficacy - our belief that we can change our behaviour, which directly affects our motivation and perseverance in changing it
Examiner Tip
Questions on health beliefs will often ask you to discuss the relationship between dispositional factors and health. Don’t forget to include how dispositional factors influence health beliefs which in turn affect health, for a more thorough and in-depth answer.
Evaluation of the health belief model
Strengths
The HBM provides a clear explanation for why people continue to engage in unhealthy behaviour in the face of evidence that they should stop in order to avoid illness
The HBM has been used to inform the development of interventions to improve health behaviour
Limitations
The HBM tends to ignore environmental and cultural factors in explaining people’s health behaviour
The model does not account for the role of physical and psychological addiction in maintaining some unhealthy behaviours
Which study investigates dispositional factors and health beliefs?
Masiero et al. (2015) conducted a study into the relationship between optimism bias and smoking and confirmed the presence of optimism bias affecting health beliefs in smokers
Masiero et al. (2015) is available as the second of ‘Two Key Studies of Dispositional Factors and Health Beliefs’ – just navigate to the Dispositional Factors and Health Beliefs section of this topic to find them.
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