Institute of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, 27 Bute Gardens, Glasgow G12 8RS, Scotland, United Kingdom.
Soc Sci Med. 2013 Jun;86:79-87. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.03.007. Epub 2013 Mar 19.
We all get ill and social scientific interest in how we respond - the study of illness behaviour - continues unabated. Existing models are useful, but have been developed and applied within disciplinary silos, resulting in wasted intellectual and empirical effort and an absence of accumulation of knowledge across disciplines. We present a critical review and detailed comparison of three process models of response to symptoms: the Illness Action Model, the Common Sense Model of the Self-Regulation of Health and Illness and the Network Episode Model. We suggest an integrated framework in which symptoms, responses and actions are simultaneously interpreted and evaluated in the light of accumulated knowledge and through interactions. Evaluation may be subconscious and is influenced by the extent to which the symptoms impose themselves, expectations of outcomes, the resources available and understanding of symptoms' salience and possible outcomes. Actions taken are part of a process of problem solving through which both individuals and their immediate social network seek to (re)achieve 'normality'. Response is also influenced by social structure (directly and indirectly), cultural expectations of health, the meaning of symptoms, and access to and understandings of the legitimate use of services. Changes in knowledge, in embodied state and in emotions can all be directly influential at any point. We do not underestimate the difficulty of operationalising an integrated framework at different levels of analysis. Attempts to do so will require us to move easily between disciplinary understandings to conduct prospective, longitudinal, research that uses novel methodologies to investigate response to symptoms in the context of affective as well as cognitive responses and interactions within social networks. While challenging such an approach would facilitate accumulation of knowledge across disciplines and enable movement beyond description to change in individual and organisational responses.
我们都会生病,社会科学界对我们如何应对疾病的兴趣(即对疾病行为的研究)持续不减。现有的模型虽然有用,但都是在学科的封闭环境中开发和应用的,导致了智力和经验的浪费,也没有在学科之间积累知识。我们对三种症状反应过程模型:疾病行动模型、健康和疾病自我调节的常识模型以及网络情节模型进行了批判性回顾和详细比较。我们提出了一个综合框架,在这个框架中,症状、反应和行动同时根据积累的知识和通过相互作用进行解释和评估。评估可能是潜意识的,并且受到症状的严重程度、对结果的期望、可用资源以及对症状的显着性和可能结果的理解的影响。所采取的行动是通过个体及其直接社交网络寻求(重新)实现“正常状态”的解决问题过程的一部分。反应还受到社会结构(直接和间接)、对健康的文化期望、症状的含义以及对合法服务的使用的理解和获取的影响。知识、体现状态和情感的变化都可以在任何时候直接产生影响。我们并没有低估在不同分析层面实施综合框架的难度。尝试这样做将要求我们在学科理解之间轻松转换,以便进行前瞻性、纵向研究,该研究使用新的方法学来研究在情感和认知反应以及社交网络内的相互作用的背景下对症状的反应。虽然这种方法具有挑战性,但它将促进学科间知识的积累,并使我们能够超越描述,实现个体和组织反应的改变。