Nonspecific mechanisms that enhance well-being in health-promoting behaviors.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalHealth psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association
Year 2011
OBJECTIVE: We tested whether the nonspecific or placebo enhancement of well-being brought about by a health-promoting behavior was due to expectancy having an unmediated effect on outcome (response expectancy theory) or because expectancy was mediated through the behavioral and affective consequences of positively valued goal satisfaction (motivational concordance theory). METHOD: Fifty-seven participants completed a breathing exercise (a simplified Buteyko technique) purporting to enhance well-being over a period of 4 days. Participants were randomized to receive either easy or difficult task instructions. Expectancy was measured at baseline and perceived effort (as an indicator of motivation) and adherence were measured at follow-up. Well-being was measured by perceived change in well-being at follow-up and by change in the Positive and Negative Affect Scale between baseline and follow-up. RESULTS: Expectancy (r = .42), adherence (r = .57), and effort (r = .90) correlated with perceived benefit. Multiple regression and mediation analysis showed that effort predicted (p < .01) well-being independently of expectancy for all 3 measures of well-being, and that where expectancy predicted outcome, its effect was mediated by effort. Adherence failed to predict additional variance to outcome compared with effort and expectancy. CONCLUSION: These results are consistent with the hypothesis that placebo effects in therapeutic contexts are mediated via the affective consequences of performing a motivated ritual. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)
Epistemonikos ID: 28526f6c8c04c95de0980f7ae7cb7936d5c10483
First added on: May 08, 2022