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Understanding Healthcare

Understanding the Health Belief Model—A Primer for Health Care Providers

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How can you improve patient compliance? Clinical outcome data supports the three theories below as predictive models for behavior. The self-efficacy, health beliefs, and stages of change models can all be helpful in determining a patient’s readiness to change.

Health care provider talking to patient..


Open communication with a patient helps you understand their health beliefs and values. It allows you to work as an equal partner with them. It can help ensure successful treatment outcomes.


Self-efficacy: Is the change doable?

Self-efficacy is the belief that one can succeed in adopting a new behavior. This is a predictor of whether a person is likely to maintain it. A patient, for instance, may not feel they can lose weight. For this patient, your communication would be aimed at raising their self-efficacy so they feel they can succeed. For instance, you could ask them what’s worked for losing weight in the past. With more self-efficacy, a patient is more likely to try—and be able to sustain—a new health behavior over time. Let the person know that they are the experts in their own lives. Show respect and empathy. Above all, don't argue with them.


Health beliefs: Does the change matter?

The health belief model focuses on a “perceived threat” that a patient thinks will happen if they continue an unhealthy behavior. Does your patient believe that a sedentary lifestyle can make their diabetes worse? If not, your communication with this patient would focus on explaining how exercise can lower blood sugar levels. This can help them come to believe that daily lifestyle choices really do impact health.


Stages of change: Is the patient ready?

Good communication is based on knowing where your patient is on the spectrum toward starting a new health behavior. This can help you tailor your dialog to where the patient is. The stages of change are:

  • Precontemplation. At this stage, a patient has no intention of making a change, such as taking medicine to control hypertension or stopping smoking.

  • Contemplation. A patient intends to take the action or make the behavior change in the next 6 months.

  • Preparation. A patient intends to make the change in the next 30 days and has already taken some steps toward change.

  • Action. A patient has just started the change or has been making it for less than 6 months.

  • Maintenance. A patient has stayed with a change for 6 months or longer.

© 2000-2025 The StayWell Company, LLC. All rights reserved. This information is not intended as a substitute for professional medical care. Always follow your healthcare professional's instructions.

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