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THE PHENOMENON OF STRESS:Experiencing Stress in our Lives, Primary Appraisal

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Lecture 13
THE PHENOMENON OF STRESS
Prologue
Tell me what's been happening in your life in the past several months. Sonia, the college counselor probed
in the student's first visit to his office. A nurse suggested that Sonia talk to a counselor because she has been
physically run down for the past few months, has been sleeping poorly, and has had several viral infections.
During this visit, she described many problems she has experienced. For one thing, this is her first year in
college and, although she goes home most weekends, she has never been away from her family, high school
friends, and fiancé Chris so long before-- and she misses them.
Her relationship with Chris is a special problem. He decided to go to a college closer to home so that he
could commute. They've been going together for 2 years, and he says he loves her, but Sonia isn't
convinced. She feels a lot of jealousy, often imagining that he is seeing others on the side even though she
has no evidence that he is. She calls him several times a week, saying she wants to hear his voice, but they
both know deep down that she's calling to check up on him. They argue about her suspicions at least once a
week. She says he's seeing others because, He's so good looking and I'm so fat." Keeping her weight down
is a constant struggle that, in her view, she always loses. Actually, her weight is within the recommended
healthful range for her height.
Sonia has also had other difficulties. She worries that she's preparing for the wrong career, argues often with
other students about the noise on her dormitory floor, and is overcommitted with schoolwork, club
activities on campus, and a part-time `ob. On top of all this, her car keeps breaking down, she's running out
of money to fix it, and her illnesses are compounding her problems.
Sonia's situation Is not uncommon. We all experience stress in our everyday lives, probably more than we
would like. It occurs in a wide variety of situations and settings--in the family, in school, and on the job, for
example. Sometimes the stress experience is brief, arid sometimes it continues for a long time. Sometimes it
is intense, and sometimes it is mild. It varies across time in a particular person, and it varies between
individuals. An experience that is stressful for one person--such as taking a difficult examination--may not
be stressful for another, and may even be exciting or challenging for still another person.
In this and coming lectures, we will discuss what stress is, where it comes from, and the impact it has. As we
do, you will find answers to questions you may have about Stress. What makes an event stressful? Why does
a particular event produce more stress in one person than in another? How does stress affect our bodies
and our behavior? Does the experience of stress change across the life span?
Experiencing Stress in our Lives
When you hear people say they are "under a lot of stress, you have some idea of what they mean. Usually
the statement means they feel unable to deal with the demands of their environment, and they Feel tense
and uncomfortable. You understand the meaning because you have had similar experiences, which you
labeled stress: Because of the pervasiveness and commonality of these experiences in our lives, you might
expect that defining the concept of stress would be simple. But it isn't. Let's see how psychologists have
conceptualized stress and what the prevailing definition is today.
What is Stress?
The condition of stress has two components: physical, involving direct material or bodily challenge, and
psychological, involving how individuals perceive circumstances in their lives. These components can be
examined in three ways. One approach focuses on the environment, describing stress as a stimulus. We see
this in people's reference to the source or cause of their tension as being an event or set of circumstances--
such as having "a high-stress job." Physically or psychologically challenging events or circumstances are
called stressors. Researchers who follow this approach study the impact of a wide range of stressors,
including (1) catastrophic events, such as tornadoes and earthquakes. (2) major life events, such as the loss
of a loved one or a job, and (3) chronic circumstances, such as living with severe pain from arthritis.
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The second approach treats stress as a response, focusing on people's reaction to stressors. We see an
example of this approach when people use the word stress to refer to their state of tension, and when
someone says. "I feel a lot of stress when I have to give a speech." Our responses can take two interrelated
forms. Psychological responses involve behavior, thought patterns, and emotions, as when you feel nervous.
Physiological responses involve heightened bodily arousal--your heart pounds, your mouth goes dry, your
stomach feels tight, and you perspire. The person's psychological and physiological response to a stressor is
called strain.
The third approach describes stress as a process that includes stressors and strains, but adds an important
dimension: the relationship between the person and the environment. This process involves continuous
interactions and adjustments--called transactions--with the person and environment each affecting and
being affected by the other. According to this view, stress is not just a stimulus or a response, but rather a
process in which the person is an active agent who can influence the impact of a stressor through
behavioral, cognitive, and emotional strategies. People differ in the amount of strain they experience from
the same stressor, such as being stuck in traffic or losing a job. One person who is stuck in traffic and late
for an important appointment keeps looking at his watch, honking his horn, and getting angrier by the
minute; another person in the same circumstances stays calm, turns on the radio, and listens to music.
We will define stress as "the condition in which person--environment transactions lead to a perceived
discrepancy between the physical or psychological demands of a situation and the resources of the
individual's biological, psychological, or social systems" (Lazarus et al. 1986). Let's look at the four
components of this definition, starting at the end.
1 - Stress taxes the person's biopsychosocial resources for coping with difficult events or circumstances.
These resources are limited, as we saw when Sonia had depleted her ability to cope with her problems,
became ill, and sought counseling. Sometimes the impact is focused mainly on our biological system--for
Instance, when we tax our physical strength to lift something heavy. More typically, however, the strain has
an impact on all three Systems; in Sonia's stressful experience, her physical, psychological, and social
resources were strained and became exhausted. Other stressful encounters that strain our biopsychosocial
resources include participating in a competitive athletic event, being injured in an accident, or becoming
nauseated before performing in a play.
2. The phrase demands of a situation" refers to the amount of our resources the stressor appears to require.
For instance, Sonia thought achieving the body weight she would need to keep Chris required tremendous
willpower.
3. When there is a poor fit, or a mismatch, between the demands of the situation and the resources of the
person, a discrepancy exists. This generally takes the form of the demands taxing or exceeding the
resources, as in Sonia's belief that she did not have the willpower to keep her weight down. But the
opposite discrepancy also occurs--that is, our resources may be underutilized--and this can be stressful,
too. A worker who is bored by a lack of challenge in a job may find this situation stressful. An important
point to keep in mind is that the discrepancy may be either real or just believed to exist. Suppose you had to
take an exam and wanted to do well, but worried greatly that you would not. If you had procrastinated and
did not prepare for the test, the discrepancy you see between the demands and your resources might be real.
But if you had previously done well on similar exams, prepared thoroughly for this one, and scored well on
a pretest in a study guide yet still thought you would not do well, the discrepancy you see would not reflect
the true state of affairs. Stress often results from inaccurate perceptions of discrepancies between
environmental demands and the actual resources. Stress is in the eye of the beholder.
4. In our transactions with the environment, we assess demands, resources, and discrepancies between
them--as Sonia might do if she notices Chris looking at an attractive woman. These transactions are
affected by many factors, including our prior experiences and aspects of the current situation. Suppose you
are on a track team and are running in a race. Relevant transactions for this race actually began long before
the race started, such as during your previous wins and losses, your recent training and fitness, and your
knowledge of and experience with your competitors. In the race, these prior transactions have an impact on
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the continuous transactions that occur you assess your strength and energy reserves, the position you are in
relative to the other runners, and the likelihood that another runner will show a surge of speed toward the
end of the race.
Appraising Events as Stressful
Transactions in stress generally involve an assessment process that Richard Lazarus and his coworkers call
cognitive appraisal. Cognitive appraisal is a mental process by which people assess two factors: (1) whether a
demand threatens their physical or psychological well-being and (2) the resources available for meeting the
demand. These two factors distinguish two types of appraisal--primary and secondary.
Primary Appraisal
When we encounter a potentially stressful event--for example, feeling symptoms of pain or nausea--we
first try to assess the meaning of the situation for our well-being. This assessment process is called primary
appraisal. In effect this appraisal seeks answers to such questions as, `What does this mean to me?" and
"Will I be okay or in trouble" Your primary appraisal regarding the pain or nausea could yield one of three
judgments:
1. It is irrelevant--as you might decide if you had had similar symptoms before that lasted only a short
while and were not followed by Illness.
2. It is good (called "benign-positive")--which might be your appraisal if you wanted very much to skip
work or have a college exam postponed.
3. It is stressful--as you might judge if you feared the symptoms were of a serious illness, such as botulism
(a life-threatening type of food poisoning).
Events that we appraise as stressful receive further appraisal for three implications: harm-loss, threat, and
challenge.
Harm-loss refers to the amount of damage that has already occurred, as when someone is in-capacitated and
in pain following a serious injury. Sometimes people who experience a relatively minor stressor think of it as
a "disaster", thereby exaggerating its personal impact and increasing their feelings of stress (Ellis, 1987).
Threat involves the expectation of future harm-- for example, when hospitalized patients contemplate their
medical bills, difficult rehabilitation, and loss of income. Stress appraisals seem to depend heavily on harm-
loss and threat. Challenge is the opportunity to achieve growth, mastery, or profit by using more than
routine resources to meet a demand. For instance, a worker might view an offer of a higher- level lob as
stressful, but see it as an opportunity to expand her skills, demonstrate her ability, and make more money.
Sometimes we experience stress even when the stressor does not relate to us directly--that is, the
transaction is vicarious. If we see other people in stressful circumstances, such as suffering from pain or a
life-threatening illness, we may empathize with their feelings and feel vulnerable ourselves. A classic
experiment demonstrated empathic appraisal by showing college-student subjects a film called "Subincision.
(Speisman, Lazarus, Mordkoff. & Davison, 1964).
The film contained stressful scenes of people of a primitive tribe having surgery. Before seeing the film, the
subjects were divided into four groups, so that each group would see the film a different way. One of the
groups saw the film with no sound track. Another group heard a sound track with a "trauma" narrative that
emphasized the pain, danger, and stressfulness of the surgery. A third group heard a denial narration that
denied the pain and potential harm depicted in the film, describing them as willing participants in a joyful
occasion who "look forward to the happy conclusion of the ceremony." The fourth group heard a
"scientific" narration that encouraged the viewers to watch in a detached manner--for example, the
narrator commented, as you can see, the operation is formal and the surgical technique, while crude, is very
carefully followed."
Did the different sound tracks affect the subjects' appraisals of stress? To evaluate this, the researchers used
both physiological and self-report measures of stress. The physiological measures, such as heart rate, were
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taken continuously during the viewing of the film. The self-report measures were questionnaires that
evaluated feelings of stress immediately after the film presentation.
The results showed that, compared with the subjects who saw the film with no sound track, those who
heard the trauma narration reacted with more stress, particularly during the film; those who heard the denial
and scientific narration reacted with less stress. These results show that people can experience stress
vicariously and that their reactions depend on the process of primary appraisal.
Secondary Appraisal
Secondary Appraisal refers to our ongoing assessment of the resources we have available for coping.
Although we generally engage in an assessment of our resources after we appraise an event as stressful,
secondary appraisal does not necessarily follow primary appraisal in time. Nevertheless, we are probably
more aware of secondary appraisal when we judge a situation as potentially stressful and try to determine
whether our resources are sufficient to meet the harm, threat, or challenge we face. Examples of secondary
appraisal judgments include;
ˇ I can't do it--I know I'll fail.
ˇ I'll try, but my chances are slim.
ˇ I can do it if Ginny will help.
ˇ If this method fails, I can try a few others.
ˇ I can do it if I work hard.
ˇ No problem--I can do it.
The condition of stress that we experience often depends on the outcome of the appraisals we make in our
transactions with the environment. When we judge the fit between demands and resources to be close, we
may experience little or no stress; but when our appraisals indicate a discrepancy, particularly if we appraise
greater demands than resources, we may feel a great deal of stress.
Can stress occur without cognitive appraisals? According to some researchers, it can, particularly in
emergency situations. Suppose you are in your car, stopped at a red light. In a split second you hear the
squealing of brakes; your body tenses as you say, "Oh my God"; and a car smashes yours in the rear. Your
saying, Oh my God!" is not really a cognitive appraisal--it's a reflexive response. But a stress reaction has
already begun, as the tensing of your body indicates, and this is "followed by `feelings' and appraisals".
Often in serious emergencies the stress reaction includes a state of shock in which the person is stunned,
dazed, or disoriented. This state may last for minutes or hours, or much longer. Because cognitive
functioning is impaired during shock, it is unlikely that appraisal processes play an important role in the
stress experienced while in that state. In non-emergency situations, cognitive appraisals appear to precede
stress reactions.
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Table of Contents:
  1. INTRODUCTION TO HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY:Health and Wellness Defined
  2. INTRODUCTION TO HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY:Early Cultures, The Middle Ages
  3. INTRODUCTION TO HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY:Psychosomatic Medicine
  4. INTRODUCTION TO HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY:The Background to Biomedical Model
  5. INTRODUCTION TO HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY:THE LIFE-SPAN PERSPECTIVE
  6. HEALTH RELATED CAREERS:Nurses and Physician Assistants, Physical Therapists
  7. THE FUNCTION OF NERVOUS SYSTEM:Prologue, The Central Nervous System
  8. THE FUNCTION OF NERVOUS SYSTEM AND ENDOCRINE GLANDS:Other Glands
  9. DIGESTIVE AND RENAL SYSTEMS:THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM, Digesting Food
  10. THE RESPIRATORY SYSTEM:The Heart and Blood Vessels, Blood Pressure
  11. BLOOD COMPOSITION:Formed Elements, Plasma, THE IMMUNE SYSTEM
  12. SOLDIERS OF THE IMMUNE SYSTEM:Less-Than-Optimal Defenses
  13. THE PHENOMENON OF STRESS:Experiencing Stress in our Lives, Primary Appraisal
  14. FACTORS THAT LEAD TO STRESSFUL APPRAISALS:Dimensions of Stress
  15. PSYCHOSOCIAL ASPECTS OF STRESS:Cognition and Stress, Emotions and Stress
  16. SOURCES OF STRESS:Sources in the Family, An Addition to the Family
  17. MEASURING STRESS:Environmental Stress, Physiological Arousal
  18. PSYCHOSOCIAL FACTORS THAT CAN MODIFY THE IMPACT OF STRESS ON HEALTH
  19. HOW STRESS AFFECTS HEALTH:Stress, Behavior and Illness, Psychoneuroimmunology
  20. COPING WITH STRESS:Prologue, Functions of Coping, Distancing
  21. REDUCING THE POTENTIAL FOR STRESS:Enhancing Social Support
  22. STRESS MANAGEMENT:Medication, Behavioral and Cognitive Methods
  23. THE PHENOMENON OF PAIN ITS NATURE AND TYPES:Perceiving Pain
  24. THE PHYSIOLOGY OF PAIN PERCEPTION:Phantom Limb Pain, Learning and Pain
  25. ASSESSING PAIN:Self-Report Methods, Behavioral Assessment Approaches
  26. DEALING WITH PAIN:Acute Clinical Pain, Chronic Clinical Pain
  27. ADJUSTING TO CHRONIC ILLNESSES:Shock, Encounter, Retreat
  28. THE COPING PROCESS IN PATIENTS OF CHRONIC ILLNESS:Asthma
  29. IMPACT OF DIFFERENT CHRONIC CONDITIONS:Psychosocial Factors in Epilepsy