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Volume 31, Issue 2: April, 2004
Health Promotion by Social Cognitive Means
Albert Bandura, PhD
This article examines health promotion and disease prevention
from the perspective of social cognitive theory. This theory
posits a multifaceted causal structure in which self-efficacy
beliefs operate together with goals, outcome expectations,
and perceived environmental impediments and facilitators in
the regulation of human motivation, behavior, and well-being.
Belief in one’s efficacy to exercise control is a common
pathway through which psychosocial influences affect health
functioning. This core belief affects each of the basic processes
of personal change—whether people even consider changing
their health habits, whether they mobilize the motivation
and perseverance needed to succeed should they do so, their
ability to recover from setbacks and relapses, and how well
they maintain the habit changes they have achieved. Human
health is a social matter, not just an individual one. A comprehensive
approach to health promotion also requires changing the practices
of social systems that have widespread effects on human health.
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