The Handbook of Salutogenesis.
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Place / Publishing House: | Cham : : Springer International Publishing AG,, 2016. ©2017. |
Year of Publication: | 2016 |
Edition: | 1st ed. |
Language: | English |
Online Access: | |
Physical Description: | 1 online resource (467 pages) |
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Table of Contents:
- Intro
- Foreword
- Preface
- Contents
- List of Abbreviations
- Contributors
- Part I: Overview and Origins of Salutogenesis
- Chapter 1: Introduction to the Handbook of Salutogenesis
- Introduction
- References
- Chapter 2: The Meanings of Salutogenesis
- Introduction
- The Salutogenic Model
- Salutogenesis as the Sense of Coherence
- The Salutogenic Orientation
- Salutogenesis in Context: Comparable Concepts and Developments
- Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 3: Aaron Antonovsky, the Scholar and the Man Behind Salutogenesis
- Introduction
- Rebellion and the Importance of Questions
- Warmth and Informality vs. Strictness and Academic Demands
- The Establishment of the Medical School and the ``Beer Sheva Spirit ́́-- New Horizons
- References
- 4: Aaron Antonovskyś Development of Salutogenesis, 1979 to 1994
- Introduction
- Stress Research: The Principal Note
- General Resistance Resources: A Shift to Another Key
- Sense of Coherence: Successive Notes of the Scale
- Tuning the Model: General Resistance Resources-General Resistance Deficits
- Health and Well-being: In or Off Key?
- Harmonizing: SMHś Relevance for Health Promotion
- Conclusions
- References
- Part II: Salutogenesis: New Directions
- Chapter 5: Salutogenesis in the Era After Antonovsky
- Reference
- 6: Emerging Ideas Relevant to the Salutogenic Model of Health
- Introduction
- The Health Development Model
- Asset Models in Health Promotion
- Margin of Resources Model (MRM)
- Fortigenesis
- Tension Management, the Sense of Coherence, and the Self-Tuning Model of Self-Care
- The Positive Deviance Approach to Social Change
- Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 7: The Salutogenic Model: The Role of Generalized Resistance Resources
- Introduction
- Generalized Resistance Resources: The Individual Level.
- Emotional Closeness and Attachment Relationships
- Personal Characteristics and Resources
- Individuals ́Social Support
- Genetic Factors
- Generalized Resistance Resources: The Family Level
- Parental Resources
- Families ́Demographic Resources
- Family Climate Factors
- Generalized Resistance Resources: The Community Level
- School Setting
- Community Feature
- Conclusions and Directions for Further Research and Interventions
- Reciprocal Relationship Between GRR-RDs and SOC
- Individuals ́Differential Susceptibility to Environment Effects
- Flexibility Versus Stability
- Selected GRR-RDs
- Clinical and Interventional Implications
- References
- Chapter 8: Specific Resistance Resources in the Salutogenic Model of Health
- Introduction
- The Salutogenic Model of Health Logic
- Specific Resistance Resources
- Definition of Specific Resistance Resources
- An Example: The Turmoil of Adolescence
- References
- Chapter 9: The Relevance of Salutogenesis to Social Issues Besides Health: The Case of Sense of Coherence and Intergroup Relat...
- Introduction
- References
- Chapter 10: Positive Psychology in the Context of Salutogenesis
- Introduction
- Positive Psychology and Salutogenesis
- Sense of Coherence and Positive Psychology
- A Salutogenic Positive Psychology
- Conclusion
- References
- Part III: The Salutogenic Construct of the Sense of Coherence
- Chapter 11: The Sense of Coherence in the Salutogenic Model of Health
- Introduction
- The Ontological Background
- The Epistemological Background
- Health as a Process
- Generalized and Specific Resistance Resources
- Sense of Coherence
- References
- Chapter 12: The Sense of Coherence and Its Measurement
- Introduction
- The Validity and Reliability of the Sense of Coherence
- Critique of the SOC-29 and SOC-13
- Sense of Coherence Develops Over Time.
- Salutogenesis Is More than the Measurement of the Sense of Coherence
- References
- 13: Salutogenesis: Sense of Coherence in Childhood and in Families
- Introduction
- Infant, Preschool, and Early Childhood Development
- Childrenś Sense of Coherence Scale
- Studies on SOC During Childhood
- SOC and the Childś Environments: Family, School, Peers, and Community
- SOC as Predictor of Health and Health Behavior
- Conclusions and Future Research Directions
- References
- Chapter 14: Salutogenesis: Sense of Coherence in Adolescence
- Introduction
- SOC Studies During Adolescence
- Adaptations of the Sense of Coherence Questionnaires
- Sense of Coherence Construct During Adolescence
- SOC, Health, Mental Health, and Psychosocial Behavior
- Ecological Contexts: Family, School, Peers, and Community
- Conclusions, Implications, and Future Research Directions
- References
- Chapter 15: Older People, Sense of Coherence and Community
- Introduction
- Ageing and Healthy Ageing
- Life Course Perspective
- Sense of Coherence and Its Three Dimensions
- How the SOC Develops in the Life Course
- SOC and Healthy Ageing
- GRR and SRR for Older People
- The Community
- Healthy Ageing in the Community
- References
- Part IV: The Application of Salutogenesis in Everyday Settings
- Chapter 16: The Application of Salutogenesis in Everyday Settings
- Introduction
- Application of Salutogenesis in the Chapters in this Part
- Overall Conceptual Relationships Between Everyday Settings and Salutogenesis
- Interrelationships Between Settings from a Salutogenic Perspective
- Dynamics of Development, Depletion, and Restoration of Generalized Resistance Resources and of sense of coherence
- Consider Positive Health Outcomes and Path of Positive Health Development.
- Relevance of Social Relationships in Settings: Need for a Group-Level Sense of Coherence in Settings?
- Inclusion and Equity Perspective
- Last, Not Least: Salutogenesis for Guiding Interventions in Settings
- Conclusions for Future Research and Practice
- References
- Chapter 17: The Application of Salutogenesis in Communities and Neighborhoods
- Introduction
- Community Intervention Approaches
- Locality Development
- Assets Orientation
- Community Organizing
- Communities as Complex Social Systems
- Link Between Healthy Communities and Salutogenesis
- Current Literature on Salutogenesis, Community, and Neighborhood
- Community as a Place to Live
- Green Spaces and Contact to Nature
- Connectedness
- Community as Social Action
- Current Research: Interventions
- Community as a Place
- Place-Related Design Principles
- Connected Communities
- Social Community Action
- Synergies Between Improving Place, Connectedness and Community Action and the Wider Determinants of Health
- Implications for Salutogenic Practice
- Implications for Salutogenic Research
- Challenges for the Future
- References
- Chapter 18: The Application of Salutogenesis in Cities and Towns
- Introduction
- Key Concepts and Cultural, Practice, and Research Contexts
- Salutogenesis and the Urban Environment
- Environmental Justice
- The Healthy City Network
- Infrastructure, Transportation, and Active Travelling
- Green spaces, Recreation, and Physical Activity
- Sense of Place
- Links Between Environmental Resources, Place, and Salutogenesis
- Research on Interventions
- Evaluations of the Healthy City Network
- Walkability: An Example of the Need for Cross-Sectorial Collaboration Over Time
- Procedural Environmental Justice and Inclusive Planning at the Local Level
- Discussion
- Implications for Salutogenesis Practice.
- Implications for Salutogenesis Research
- References
- Chapter 19: The Restorative Environment: A Complementary Concept for Salutogenesis Studies
- Introduction
- Key Concepts
- Resources
- Antecedent Condition for Restoration
- The Restorative Environment
- Constrained Restoration
- Key Cultural, Practice, and Research Contexts
- Natural and Urban Environments
- Residential Environments
- Health Care Environments
- Theoretical and Empirical Research
- Basic Theory and Research on Restorative Processes
- Psychophysiological Stress Recovery Theory
- Attention Restoration Theory
- Social Aspects of Restorative Experience
- Insights from Behavior Setting Theory
- A Theory of Collective Restoration
- Research on Interventions
- Discussion of Implications
- Implications for Salutogenesis Research
- Implications for Salutogenesis Practice
- Challenges for the Future
- References
- Chapter 20: The Application of Salutogenesis to Work
- Introduction
- General Resistance Resources and Sense of Coherence in the Context of Work
- Cultural Context
- Practice Context
- Research on the Role of Sense of Coherence at Work
- Job Demands, Control, and Support-A Salutogenic Pathway
- The Job Demands-Resources (JD-R) Model Viewed Through the Lens of Salutogenesis
- Adding Salutogenesis: The JD-R Health Model
- The Dynamics of Job Resources
- The Role of Sense of Coherence in the Salutogenic and Pathogenic Pathways
- Work-SoC: Measuring Coherent Work Experiences
- Self-Tuning: Promoting and Protecting a Meaningful Work-Life
- Pathogenic and Salutogenic Health Measures in the Context of Workplace Health Promotion
- Making Salutogenesis Visible
- The ARK Intervention Programme: A Salutogenic Focus in Academic Institutions
- Discussion
- Challenges for the Future
- References.
- Chapter 21: The Application of Salutogenesis to Organisations.