Gardner Benjamin, Arden Madelynne A, Brown Daniel, Eves Frank F, Green James, Hamilton Kyra, Hankonen Nelli, Inauen Jennifer, Keller Jan, Kwasnicka Dominika, Labudek Sarah, Marien Hans, Masaryk Radomír, McCleary Nicola, Mullan Barbara A, Neter Efrat, Orbell Sheina, Potthoff Sebastian, Lally Phillippa
Department of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK.
Centre for Behavioural Science and Applied Psychology, Department of Psychology, Sociology & Politics, Sheffield Hallam University, Sheffield, UK.
Psychol Health. 2023 Apr;38(4):518-540. doi: 10.1080/08870446.2021.2003362. Epub 2021 Nov 14.
Habitual behaviours are triggered automatically, with little conscious forethought. Theory suggests that making healthy behaviours habitual, and breaking the habits that underpin many ingrained unhealthy behaviours, promotes long-term behaviour change. This has prompted interest in incorporating habit formation and disruption strategies into behaviour change interventions. Yet, notable research gaps limit understanding of how to harness habit to change real-world behaviours.
Discussions among health psychology researchers and practitioners, at the 2019 European Health Psychology Society 'Synergy Expert Meeting', generated pertinent questions to guide further research into habit and health behaviour.
In line with the four topics discussed at the meeting, 21 questions were identified, concerning: how habit manifests in health behaviour (3 questions); how to form healthy habits (5 questions); how to break unhealthy habits (4 questions); and how to develop and evaluate habit-based behaviour change interventions (9 questions).
While our questions transcend research contexts, accumulating knowledge across studies of specific health behaviours, settings, and populations will build a broader understanding of habit change principles and how they may be embedded into interventions. We encourage researchers and practitioners to prioritise these questions, to further theory and evidence around how to create long-lasting health behaviour change.
习惯性行为是自动触发的,几乎无需有意识的预先思考。理论表明,使健康行为成为习惯,并打破许多根深蒂固的不健康行为所依赖的习惯,能促进长期行为改变。这引发了人们将习惯养成与打破策略纳入行为改变干预措施的兴趣。然而,显著的研究空白限制了我们对如何利用习惯来改变现实世界行为的理解。
在2019年欧洲健康心理学会“协同专家会议”上,健康心理学研究人员和从业者进行了讨论,提出了相关问题,以指导对习惯与健康行为的进一步研究。
根据会议讨论的四个主题,确定了21个问题,涉及:习惯在健康行为中如何表现(3个问题);如何养成健康习惯(5个问题);如何打破不健康习惯(4个问题);以及如何开发和评估基于习惯的行为改变干预措施(9个问题)。
虽然我们的问题超越了研究背景,但跨特定健康行为、环境和人群的研究积累知识,将有助于更广泛地理解习惯改变原则以及如何将这些原则融入干预措施。我们鼓励研究人员和从业者优先考虑这些问题,以进一步完善关于如何实现持久健康行为改变的理论和证据。