Behavioural Cardiology at the Department of Psychology, Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz, Germany
- 1 July 2008
- journal article
- Published by Hogrefe Publishing Group in Zeitschrift für Gesundheitspsychologie
- Vol. 16 (3) , 154-156
- https://doi.org/10.1026/0943-8149.16.3.154
Abstract
We provide a short overview of the research in Behavioural Cardiology at the Department of Psychology at the Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz focussing on two lines of research: Studies of psychosocial variables that might enhance or attenuate cardiovascular risk in healthy individuals and studies of psychosocial variables and health behaviours that might impact the health status of patients listed for heart transplantation. Our studies so far suggest that psychosocial factors like anxiety and repressive coping impact information processing and cardiovascular responses to stress. Moreover, we examine the impact of health-protective resource variables including self-efficacy and physical activity on psychological and physiological functioning in everyday life. Our studies of patients newly listed for heart transplantation document high levels of depression, the relevance of ischaemic aetiology regarding negative emotions and lacking support, and difficulties with smoking cessation and fluid restriction. Future analyses will show if these characteristics independently contribute to adverse pre-transplantation outcomes.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Gibt es einen Zusammenhang zwischen Bewegungsaktivität und psychischem Befinden im Alltag?Zeitschrift für Gesundheitspsychologie, 2008
- Avoidant coping, verbal-autonomic response dissociation and pain tolerancePsychology & Health, 2006
- Verbal-autonomic response dissociations as traits?Biological Psychology, 2006
- Trait anxiety and autonomic indicators of the processing of threatening information: A cued S1–S2 paradigmBiological Psychology, 2006
- Interactive effects of avoidant coping and parental hypertension on Rate Pressure Product reactivity in womenAnnals of Behavioral Medicine, 2005
- Repressive Coping Style and the Significance of Verbal-Autonomic Response DissociationsPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Coping With Threat and Memory for Ambiguous Information: Testing the Repressive Discontinuity Hypothesis.Emotion, 2004
- A prognostic model for predicting waiting-list mortality for a total national cohort of adult heart-transplant candidatesTransplantation, 2003
- Effect of receiving a heart transplant: analysis of a national cohort entered on to a waiting list, stratified by heart failure severity Commentary: Time for a controlled trial?BMJ, 2000
- Protective and Damaging Effects of Stress MediatorsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1998