The art of motivating behavior change: the use of motivational interviewing to promote health.

H E Shinitzky, J Kub
Author Information
  1. H E Shinitzky: Department of Pediatrics, Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine, Baltimore, USA. hshinitz@jhmi.edu

Abstract

Health promotion and disease prevention have always been essential to public health nursing. With the changing health care system and an increased emphasis on cost-containment, the role of the nurse is expanding even more into this arena. A challenge for public health nurses, then, is to motivate and facilitate health behavior change in working with individuals, families, and communities and designing programs based on theory. Leading causes of death continue to relate to health behaviors that require change. The purpose of this article is to integrate theory with practice by describing the Transtheoretical Model of Change as well as the principles of motivational interviewing that can be used in motivating behavioral change. A case scenario is presented to illustrate the use of the models with effective interviewing skills that can be used to enhance health. Implications for practice with an emphasis on providing an individually tailored matched intervention is stressed.

MeSH Term

Behavior Therapy
Decision Making
Health Behavior
Health Promotion
Humans
Interviews as Topic
Life Style
Male
Middle Aged
Models, Psychological
Motivation
Nurse-Patient Relations
Persuasive Communication
Primary Prevention
Public Health Nursing
Risk-Taking

Word Cloud

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