front 1 The confidence in one's ability to avoid any substance use in the first place, which pertains to primary prevention is | back 1 resistance self-efficacy |
front 2 The term ____ refers to the specific phases in health-behavior change | back 2 phase-specific self-efficacy |
front 3 "I am confident that I can ... (action), even if ... (a barrier)" are questions that pertain to | back 3 Self-efficacy |
front 4 Pleasurable and aversive effects of a behavior and the accompanying material losses and benefits are | back 4 physical outcome expectations |
front 5 An optimistic belief where an individual develops an intention to change is | back 5 pre-action self-efficacy |
front 6 Select all that apply. Self-efficacy can be enhanced through | back 6
|
front 7 Self-efficacy is different from self-esteem, self-concept, and self-control by | back 7 internal attribution perspective, and an operative construct |
front 8 Anticipated social responses to behavioral change come from | back 8 social outcome expectations |
front 9 A person's belief about their ability to keep the harmful effects of their addiction to a minimum, which pertains to secondary prevention is | back 9 harm-reduction self efficacy |
front 10 What is one example of increasing self-efficacy through emotional arousal? | back 10 Help manage aversive emotions that might come during challenges |
front 11 The difference between harm reduction self efficacy and recovery self efficacy in health psychology is | back 11 Harm reduction seeks to reduce harmful behaviors, while recovery deals with overcoming failures |
front 12 self-evaluative outcome expectations | back 12 anticipation of experiences, such as being ashamed, being proud of oneself, or satisfied, due to internal standards |
front 13 general self-efficacy | back 13 your generalized belief that you will be successful at whatever challenges or tasks you might face |
front 14 coping (maintenance) self-efficacy | back 14 Beliefs relating to our ability to deal effectively with a stressful stimulus or situation, including pain |
front 15 sociostructural factors | back 15 impediments (barriers) or opportunities that reside in living conditions, health systems, political, economic or environmental systems |
front 16 Select all that apply. Banduras criticism of behaviorism is that | back 16
|