1. True/False- According to the Ted Talk (Asch, 2019) ,the speaker would be likely to endorse a health promotion/advertisement campaign which promises financial rewards/compensations for complying with COVID-19 safety protocols
True
False
2. T/F- According to the information presented in the powerpoint (Gender/Mental Health); both men and women can be diagnosed with eating disorders
True
False
3. T/F- The transtheoretical model of health behavior change is based on the idea that when changing health behvior, there are five main influences – religion, culture, gender, age and race.
True
False
4. Which of the following is an example of a secondary prevention strategy that might be used to address “eating disorders in male college students?”
A general practicitoner (GP)/physican advises all incoming male college students to maintain a healthy body weight during required annual physical examination
An ER doctor performs weight loss surgery on a college student who is morbidly obese
A health psychologist meets with a group of 10 male atheletes in weekly group sessions. These atheletes have been identified as those who have all expressed unhealthy or excessive concerns in maintaining a low body wieght during pre-season health screenings.
all of the above
5. According to the transtheoretical model of health behavior change, a person who is in the ___________________stage will generally have a higher level of motivation to change than a person who is in the ______________stage
contemplation; precontemplation
precontemplation; action
contemplation; action
recovery; self-efficacy
6. “Subjective norms” is a terrm/concept generally associated with the _____________________of health behavior change; whereas “self-efficacy” is a concept/term that is usually linked to the _________________of health behavior change?
health belief model; theory of planned behavior model
theory of planned behavior model; health belief model
transtheoretical model; social jet lag model
emotion focused model; problem focused model
sources: https://www.ted.com/talks/david_asch_why_it_s_so_hard_to_make_healthy_decisions?language=en