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Home | Health | Wellness | The Relevance of the ...

The Relevance of the Stages of Change Model

Submitted by ravi and viewed 673 times
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The Stages of Change model is relevant to a wide variety of Wellness Plans because it literally moves the goal posts. In the past, health educators and others seeking behavior change measured their success (and their individuals' successes) only in terms of whether or not the behavior changed.
The Stages of Change model is relevant to a wide variety of Wellness Plans because it literally moves the goal posts. In the past, health educators and others seeking behavior change measured their success (and their individuals' successes) only in terms of whether or not the behavior changed. Because behavior change is complex and challenging, this attitude set up both program designers and their intended beneficiaries for failure.

By exploring and noting the nuances of the change process, the Stages of Change model gives us more opportunities to intervene successfully, and, more importantly, to succeed. If a initiative's individuals are mainly precontemplators, then an appropriate intervention might be one that assists raise their awareness of the relative pros and cons of changing behavior rather than one that focuses on the preparation or action stages of the change process.

Likewise, an intervention targeting individuals in the preparation and action stages would have more success recruiting individuals into a program. In this way, resources are matched to the right audience — and to that audience's stage of readiness for change. Otherwise, scarce resources can be wasted (with messages truly falling on deaf ears), and both sides are likely to experience frustration and defeat.

When sexuality educators try to motivate young individuals to adopt safer sex behaviors, an awareness of stages of change, its processes, and the mechanics of decisional balance (weighing pros and cons) can be critical. The notion that relapse is not necessarily a failure is also vitally important. For example, according to Stages of Change, a young person who begins using a condom some of the time (but has not yet achieved a goal of using condoms all of the time) is still a success because he or she has taken an action and is moving towards a positive goal.
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