Taking moments to enjoy life helps Patients
make better Health Decisions
Newswise,
January 25, 2012--The experience of daily
positive affect -- a mild, happy feeling --
and self-affirmation helps some patients
with chronic diseases, including coronary
artery disease, high blood pressure and
asthma, make better decisions about their
health.
These findings are detailed in three studies
of 756 patients published online in the Jan.
23 edition of the Archives of Internal
Medicine -- the first large, randomized
controlled trials to show that people can
use positive affect and self-affirmation to
help them make and sustain behavior change.
The research was funded by a $9.5 million
contract from the National Heart, Lung and
Blood Institute (NHLBI) of the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) and led by Dr.
Mary Charlson, executive director of the
Center for Integrative Medicine at Weill
Cornell Medical College and the William T.
Foley Distinguished Professor of Medicine
and professor of integrative medicine at
Weill Cornell Medical College.
She is also chief of the Division of
Clinical Epidemiology and Evaluative
Sciences Research in the Department of
Medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College.
The same intervention was used in all three
studies. Patients were encouraged to think
of small things in their lives that make
them feel good (such as seeing a beautiful
sunset) when they get up in the morning and
throughout their day. Patients were also
asked to use self-affirmation to help them
overcome obstacles to their plan by
recalling moments in their lives they are
proud of, such as a graduation (see script
excerpt below). The script, created by Dr.
Charlson, is now in the public domain and
free to use.
"This simple approach gives patients the
tools that help them fulfill their promise
to themselves that they will do what's
needed for their health," says Dr. Charlson.
"For example, if it's raining and they don't
feel like exercising, these strategies can
help them get past this mental block and
into their sneakers."
Excerpt from Positive
Affect/Self-Affirmation Script:
First, when you get up in the morning, think
about the small things that you said make
you feel good, like
__________________________ (example: babies
in hats, the sunrise...). Then as you go
through your day, notice those and other
small things that make you feel good and
take a moment to enjoy them.
Second, when you encounter some difficulties
or are in a situation that makes it hard for
you (e.g. taking your blood pressure
medications or exercising), think about
things you enjoy or proud moments in your
life, like __________________________
(example: a graduation, success of a
child...).
The behavior changes employed in the studies
are known to be beneficial -- whether it is
increased physical activity for coronary
artery disease or regularly taking
medication for high blood pressure or
asthma. "In this way, positive affect made a
real difference -- patients are better able
to follow through on behaviors to improve
their health," Dr. Charlson adds.
Patients were randomly assigned either to
the experimental "positive affect" group or
to a control group. Both groups made
personal contracts to adhere to their
behavior plans, were given an educational
guide on the importance of their
intervention, and received phone calls every
two months to check in on their progress.
Along with daily use of positive affect,
patients in the experimental group received
surprise gifts like tote bags prior to the
phone sessions. The monetary value of the
gifts was unimportant, Dr. Charlson
explains; rather, they were symbolic and
served to reinforce the intervention.
Results were measured at the completion of
the yearlong studies. For coronary artery
disease, 55 percent of patients practicing
the positive affect/self-affirmations
increased their physical activity compared
with 37 percent in the control group; the
positive affect group walked an average of
3.4 miles a week more than the control
group.
For high blood pressure (the study focused
on African-Americans with the disease), 42
percent of the positive affirmation group
adhered to their medication plan compared
with 36 percent in the control group. For
asthma patients, there was no difference in
energy expenditure between the two groups;
however, there was some benefit for patients
requiring medical care during the trial.
The design of the studies, which
simultaneously tested the same intervention
for different populations, was one of the
first for NIH-funded research, and began
with contract awarded to Weill Cornell
Medical College in 2002.
This intervention development approach is
now being more broadly used in the
obesity-related behavioral intervention
trials (ORBIT) sponsored by the NIH. Dr.
Charlson is a recipient of an award titled
"SCALE: Small Changes and Lasting Effects"
under the ORBIT trials. The findings of the
three trials are the basis for "SCALE" for
overweight or obese patients.