Publication | Closed Access
Behavioral medicine: the challenge of integrating psychological and behavioral approaches into primary care.
20
Citations
59
References
2002
Year
Family MedicineHealth PsychologyMental HealthHealth StudiesSelf-care InterventionPrimary CareChronic Disease ManagementHealth CommunicationPublic HealthPsychiatryHealth PolicyAdult Behavioral HealthBehavioral ApproachesPatient SupportBiobehavioral HealthLifestyle InterventionsHealth PromotionChronic Disease PreventionBehavior TherapyBehavioral MedicineCardiovascular DiseaseHealth BehaviorBehavioral HealthMedicine
some of the most common chronic illnesses (e.g., cancer, chronic pain, cardiovascular disease, Crohn disease, diabetes, asthma/chronic obstructive pulmonary disease). With increased recognition of and empirical support for the contribution of psychological and behavioral variables in the development, maintenance, and/or exacerbation of disease comes the need for increased treatment options that incorporate not only the best of biomedical knowledge but also of biobehavioral science. In this article, we present some thoughts on how “applied” behavioral medicine can be incorporated into health care, particularly primary care. To help readers understand behavioral medicine, we briefly review some of the evidence supporting behavioral medicine interventions for patients with cardiovascular disease and cancer. We then discuss how we have applied a conceptual model to implement behavioral medicine interventions into care at our own institution. Our goal is to encourage further dialogue on how to integrate behavioral medicine interventions into evidence-based health care.
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