Geschreven door studenten die geslaagd zijn Direct beschikbaar na je betaling Online lezen of als PDF Verkeerd document? Gratis ruilen 4,6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Samenvatting

PAICD Complete Summary – All Lectures & Book Chapters (Grade 8.8)

Beoordeling
-
Verkocht
1
Pagina's
77
Geüpload op
08-01-2026
Geschreven in
2025/2026

This document is a complete and student-friendly summary of the course Psychological Assessment and Interventions in Chronic Disease (PAICD), taught in Block 2 at Leiden University. The summary brings together all required material in one clear and structured overview, including the lecture slides posted on Brightspace, the mandatory book chapters, and the required article. For the book, it covers chapters 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12, 13, 15, and 16 from Comprehensive Handbook of Clinical Health Psychology by Boyer and Paharia (2008). In addition, it includes the article by Evers, Spillekom-van Koulil, and Van Beugen (2016) on psychological treatments for dermatological conditions, as used in the PAICD course at Leiden University. I used this summary to prepare for the exam and achieved a final grade of 8.8. The summary is specifically written with the open exam format in mind. In addition, I strongly recommend using it together with the separate color-coded system, which uses six different colors to structure the material (on my page, also in a study bundle). This system is especially helpful if you like to highlight while studying, as it makes it much easier to distinguish between biological, psychological, and environmental or contextual factors. Being able to clearly identify and combine these different factors is essential for this course and is explicitly expected in the open exam questions. PAICD is one of the four mandatory courses in the program, and this summary is designed to help you study efficiently without losing important theoretical depth. Everything is explained in a clear and accessible way, making it easier to revise the material and to apply the concepts during the exam. If this summary helps you with your studies and you are happy with it, I would really appreciate a positive review on Stuvia.

Meer zien Lees minder
Instelling
Vak

Voorbeeld van de inhoud

Lecture 1 - Psychosocial and biomedical aspects of chronic illness and disability
(introduction)

1. What is chronic illness?

Chronic somatic diseases are noncontagious, long-term conditions that:

●​ Can often be controlled
●​ Generally cannot be cured
●​ Are not preventable via vaccination
●​ → Globally, >50% of deaths are due to chronic diseases.

2. Risk factors for Chronic Disease

Behavioral risk Biological risk Additional psychosocial risk contributors:
factors: factors:
●​ Age (especially elderly)
●​ Physical ●​ High blood ●​ Gender differences (e.g., women
inactivity pressure show unique vulnerability via
●​ Unhealthy ●​ High psychosocial & biological pathways)
diet cholesterol ●​ Maladaptive coping
●​ Tobacco use ●​ Overweight ●​ Stress-related neuroendocrine and
immune dysfunction
●​ Personality factors


3. Chronic illness across the lifespan: the elderly

Key statistics:

●​ 80–90% of adults ≥65 have ≥1 chronic condition.
●​ Hypertension affects 70–80% of adults ≥65.
●​ Coronary artery disease affects 10–20%.
●​ Type 2 diabetes affects 25–30%.
●​ Osteoarthritis affects 50%.

3. What does a health psychologist do?

Clinical role:

●​ Address barriers to healthy behavior (e.g., adherence)
●​ Help with adjustment and coping
●​ Treat psychosocial problems associated with chronic disease​



1

,Research role:

●​ Identify facilitators/barriers to healthy behavior
●​ Study mechanisms of psychological adjustment and interventions
●​ Examine psychosocial factors related to chronic disease

4. Consequences of chronic illness (GENERAL)

Chronic illness may impact: Factors that influence adjustment:

●​ Changes in body integrity ●​ Personal factors
●​ Changes in mental and physical (gender, age, coping skills)
well-being ●​ Social and family support
●​ Changes in self-concept and loss of (emotional & practical help)
●​ Socioeconomic status
control
(access to resources/healthcare)
●​ Changes in life goals and future plans
●​ Cultural background
●​ Changes in social roles (relationships, (beliefs and values about illness)
colleagues) ●​ Impact on daily activities
●​ Potential loss of independence (work, school, recreation)
●​ Financial instability ●​ Personal goals (what the person wants
to maintain/achieve)
→ Overall: redefining yourself as a person ●​ Life stage (child vs adult vs older adult)
with a chronic condition



Emotional reactions:
●​ Grief (reaction to loss)
●​ Fear & anxiety (response to threat; rational and irrational aspects)
●​ Anger (frustration, self-blame, blaming others)
●​ Depression, helplessness, hopelessness, apathy
●​ Guilt (self-criticism or blame)

5. The Biopsychosocial Model (practical application)

●​ Biological factors: genetics, physiology, pathogens
●​ Psychological factors: behavior, cognition, stress
●​ Social factors: SES, culture, social support

The lecture emphasizes clinical application, not just
theory:​
→ Treatment must integrate biological + psychological +
social components.




2

,A. Barriers to Integrating BPS care:

●​ Challenge: theory vs practice
●​ Physicians tend to use a biomedical model → physician = expert, patient = passive.
●​ Psychologists often use a psychosocial model → therapist as coach, patient active.
●​ This creates referral barriers and misunderstandings (e.g., patients feeling that
referral to a psychologist means “it’s all in my head”).
●​ Integration requires mutual understanding: “Do we speak each other’s language?”
and cross-training in both psychosocial and biomedical aspects.

6. Advanced - Psychoneuroimmunology & Brain Plasticity: Evidence for BPS Interactions

Brain changes in chronic pain can reverse after:

●​ Spine surgery or facet joint injections
●​ CBT treatment, which is shown to increase prefrontal cortex gray matter

Psychoneuroimmunology: relationship between psychological stress and immune
responses:

●​ Laboratory stress (Trier Social Stress Test) linked to increases in inflammatory
markers (e.g., IL-6).
●​ In RA/psoriasis patients, a brief stress management training (4 × 1-hour sessions
with relaxation, psychoeducation, breathing, relapse prevention) led to lower
stress-induced IL-8 and cortisol at follow-up compared to controls.

7. Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)

What is IBS?

●​ Common, chronic GI disorder affecting the large intestine.
●​ Functional disorder: significant discomfort but no structural tissue damage, no
increased cancer risk.

A. Core symptoms:

●​ Abdominal pain (often relieved after bowel movement)
●​ Bloating and gas
●​ Changes in bowel habits:
○​ IBS-D (diarrhea-dominant)
○​ IBS-C (constipation-dominant)
○​ IBS-M (mixed)
●​ Mucus in stool
●​ Fatigue and sleep problems


3

, B. Biological factors:

●​ History of gut infections (e.g., gastroenteritis)
●​ Abnormal gut motility (too fast → diarrhea; too slow → constipation)
●​ Visceral hypersensitivity (increased pain sensitivity in intestines)

C. Psychological factors:

●​ High stress can trigger or worsen symptoms
●​ Maladaptive cognitions (e.g., catastrophizing about pain, bathroom access)
●​ Comorbid anxiety and depression may intensify symptom perception

D. Social factors:

●​ Stigma → hiding symptoms → isolation → extra stress
●​ Low social support → fewer coping resources, more difficulty managing symptoms
●​ Stressful lifestyles, irregular schedules, irregular eating → worse motility &
symptoms

E. Psychological impact:

●​ Anxiety & depression (bi-directional relationship with symptoms)
●​ Social avoidance due to fear of flare-ups
●​ Reduced QoL (work, daily activities, relationships)

F. Medical treatment:

●​ Dietary changes
●​ Medications:
○​ Antispasmodics (reduce gut muscle spasms and pain)
○​ Laxatives/fiber supplements (IBS-C)
○​ Antidiarrheals (IBS-D)
○​ Probiotics
○​ Low-dose psychotropic meds for symptom management

G. Psychological treatment:

●​ CBT for thoughts/behaviors related to symptoms
●​ Stress management (relaxation, breathing, mindfulness, meditation)
●​ Biofeedback to gain control over bodily responses
●​ Psychotherapy to address underlying psychological issues​




4

Gekoppeld boek

Geschreven voor

Instelling
Studie
Vak

Documentinformatie

Heel boek samengevat?
Nee
Wat is er van het boek samengevat?
Chapters 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12, 13, 15, & 16
Geüpload op
8 januari 2026
Aantal pagina's
77
Geschreven in
2025/2026
Type
SAMENVATTING

Onderwerpen

$15.55
Krijg toegang tot het volledige document:

Verkeerd document? Gratis ruilen Binnen 14 dagen na aankoop en voor het downloaden kun je een ander document kiezen. Je kunt het bedrag gewoon opnieuw besteden.
Geschreven door studenten die geslaagd zijn
Direct beschikbaar na je betaling
Online lezen of als PDF

Maak kennis met de verkoper
Seller avatar
AdriVerh1

Ook beschikbaar in voordeelbundel

Maak kennis met de verkoper

Seller avatar
AdriVerh1 Universiteit Leiden
Volgen Je moet ingelogd zijn om studenten of vakken te kunnen volgen
Verkocht
1
Lid sinds
1 jaar
Aantal volgers
0
Documenten
2
Laatst verkocht
4 maanden geleden

0.0

0 beoordelingen

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recent door jou bekeken

Waarom studenten kiezen voor Stuvia

Gemaakt door medestudenten, geverifieerd door reviews

Kwaliteit die je kunt vertrouwen: geschreven door studenten die slaagden en beoordeeld door anderen die dit document gebruikten.

Niet tevreden? Kies een ander document

Geen zorgen! Je kunt voor hetzelfde geld direct een ander document kiezen dat beter past bij wat je zoekt.

Betaal zoals je wilt, start meteen met leren

Geen abonnement, geen verplichtingen. Betaal zoals je gewend bent via iDeal of creditcard en download je PDF-document meteen.

Student with book image

“Gekocht, gedownload en geslaagd. Zo makkelijk kan het dus zijn.”

Alisha Student

Bezig met je bronvermelding?

Maak nauwkeurige citaten in APA, MLA en Harvard met onze gratis bronnengenerator.

Bezig met je bronvermelding?

Veelgestelde vragen