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Selyes general adaptation syndrome
Page 234 Black blue 234 HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY WHAT IS STRESS? The term ‘stress’ means many things to many different people. A layperson may define stress in terms of pressure, tension, unpleasant external forces or an emotional response. Psychologists have defined stress in a variety of different ways. Contemporary definitions of stress regard the external environmental stress as a stressor (e.g. problems at work), the response to the stressor as stress or distress (e.g. the feeling of tension), and the concept of stress as something that involves biochemical, physiological, behavioural and psychological changes. Researchers have also differentiated between stress that is harmful and damaging (distress) and stress that is positive and beneficial (eustress). In addition, researchers differentiate between acute stress such as an exam or having to give a public talk and chronic stress such as job stress and poverty. The most commonly used definition of stress was developed by Lazarus and Launier (1978), who regarded stress as a transaction between people and the environment and described stress in terms of ‘person environment fit’. If a person is faced with a potentially difficult stressor such as an exam or having to give a public talk the degree of stress they experience is determined first by their appraisal of the event (‘is it stressful?’) and second by their appraisal of their own personal resources (‘will I cope?). A good person environment fit results in no or low stress and a poor fit results in higher stress. THE DEVELOPMENT OF STRESS MODELS Over the past few decades, models of stress have varied in terms of their definition of stress, their differing emphasis on physiological and psychological factors, and their description of the relationship between individuals and their environment. Cannon’s fight or flight model One of the earliest models of stress was developed by Cannon (1932). This was called the fight or flight model of stress, which suggested that external threats elicited the fight or flight response involving an increased activity rate and increased arousal. He suggested that these physiological changes enabled the individual to either escape from the source of stress or fight. Within Cannon’s model, stress was defined as a response to external stressors, which was predominantly seen as physiological. Cannon considered stress to be an adaptive response as it enabled the individual to manage a stressful event. However, he also recognized that prolonged stress could result in medical problems. Selye’s general adaptation syndrome Selye’s general adaptation syndrome (GAS) was developed in 1956 and described three stages in the stress process (Selye 1956). The initial stage was called the ‘alarm’ stage, which described an increase in activity, and occurred immediately the individual was exposed to a stressful situation. The second stage was called ‘resistance’, which involved coping and attempts to reverse the effects of the alarm stage. The third stage was called Page 234 Black blue