Publication | Closed Access
Motivation Is Not Enough: Prediction of Risk Behavior Following Diagnosis of Coronary Heart Disease From the Theory of Planned Behavior.
140
Citations
24
References
2004
Year
Physical ActivityBehavioral Decision MakingBehavioral AspectBehavior PredictionHealth PsychologyPerceived Behavioral ControlPsychologySocial SciencesPlanned BehaviorPublic HealthRisk BehaviorBehavioral SciencesExtended TheoryHealth PromotionMotivationRiskAction ImplementationBehavior Change (Individual)Coronary Heart DiseaseBehavioral EconomicsBehavioral MedicineHealth BehaviorProximal PredictorsBehavioral InsightBehavior ChangeLifestyle ChangeDecision Science
Perceived behavioral control (PBC) and intention, the proximal predictors from the theory of planned behavior (TPB), were used to predict cardiovascular risk behaviors in 597 patients 1 year after diagnosis with coronary heart disease. The outcome measures were self-report measures of exercise plus objective measures of fitness (distance walked in 6 min) and cotinine-confirmed smoking cessation. In multivariate analyses incorporating both PBC and intention, PBC predicted exercise, distance walked, and smoking cessation, but intention was not a reliable independent predictor of any health behavior measured. Thus, the effective theoretical component of the TPB was PBC. Similar predictions could derive from social-cognitive theory. In coronary patients, behavioral change needs to address issues of action implementation rather than motivational factors alone.
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