What is one difference between the Transtheoretical model and precaution adoption process model?

Summary

People don’t change all at once. Instead, they go through a process that can begin before they have made any specific plans to change. The process ends with the change having been solidly established for more than six months, but there can be slips and relapses along the way. Moving audience members at the early stages of change (which involve more thinking) would involve different strategies than would moving them through later stages (which involve more doing).

Authors

Prochaska, J.O. & DiClemente, C.C.

Seminal references

Prochaska JO, DiClemente CC. Stages and processes of self-change of smoking: Toward an integrative model of change. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 51(3): 390–395, 1983.

Bandura A. Moral disengagement in the perpetration of inhumanities. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 1999, (3), 193-209.

Major constructs

Stages of readiness to change: precontemplation, contemplation, preparation, action, & maintenance. Associated with each stage is a list of “Processes of Change” – internal and external strategies for progressing through the stages. Decisional balance self-efficacy and temptation to relapse appear in the later writings.

Examples

Reger B, Cooper L, Booth-Butterfield S, Smith H, Bauman A, Wootan M, Middlestadt S, Marcus B, Greer F. Wheeling Walks: a community campaign using paid media to encourage walking among sedentary older adults. Prev Med. 2002 Sep;35(3):285-92. PubMed PMID: 12202072.

CDC AIDS Community Demonstration Projects Research Group. (1999). The CDC AIDS Community Demonstration Projects: A multi-site community-level intervention to promote HIV risk reduction. American Journal of Public Health, 89 (3), 336-345.

Major advantages

  • Takes into account the fact that change doesn’t happen all at once.
  • Movement between stages can be viewed as a sensitive measure of program outcome.
  • Developed to explain smoking cessation; typically a good fit with addictive behaviors.
  • TTM includes stages before and after action, offers good measures of decisional balance and is more fully specified with regard to processes of change than a similar theory, the Precaution Adoption Process Model (PAPM)

Major Criticisms

  • Not useful for behaviors that have to be performed only once.
  • Has not proven predictive of smoking behavior for pregnant women; many stop smoking upon learning that they are pregnant, and relapse soon after the birth of their babies.
  • The six month demarcation between action and maintenance is arbitrary.
  • TTM doesn’t distinguish between being unaware of the need to change and uninterested in changing, and ignores decisions not to adopt a behavior, which the PAPM does address.

Resources

National Cancer Institute, Theory at a Glance (see pages 15-16)

Cancer Prevention Research Center, Transtheoretical Model

What is the precaution adoption process model?

The Precaution Adoption Process Model The PAPM attempts to explain how a person comes to decisions to take action and how he or she translates that decision into action. Adoption of a new precaution or cessation of a risky behavior requires deliberate steps unlikely to occur outside of conscious awareness.

What is the Transtheoretical Model theory?

The transtheoretical model posits that health behavior change involves progress through six stages of change: precontemplation, contemplation, preparation, action, maintenance, and termination.

How many stages are there in precaution adoption process model?

The Precaution Adoption Process Model The model specifies seven discrete stages. The model specifies seven discrete stages. In Stage 1, people are unaware of the health issue.