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  3. Investigating stress and health behaviour relationships in daily life: towards a framework for advancing future research.
 

Investigating stress and health behaviour relationships in daily life: towards a framework for advancing future research.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/96144
Publisher DOI
10.1080/17437199.2026.2637421
PubMed ID
41791841
Description
ABSTRACTStress is of major relevance for health and well-being. Health behaviour is one pathway by which stress affects health. Less research has jointly investigated stress and health behaviour but lately it has gained traction owing to the increased availability of methods for studying daily life that allow stress and health behaviour to be studied when and where it occurs. However, findings are highly heterogeneous, with studies finding positive, negative or no relationship between stress and health behaviour. In this paper, we discuss key sources of this heterogeneity, working toward a framework that will guide the field forward. Key elements of the framework include specifying (1) which stress aspects are related to which health behaviours, (2) considering the bidirectionality and (3) temporal dynamics of the stress-health behaviour relationship, and identifying (4) for whom and (5) under what circumstances stress relates to health behaviour. Further, we (6) highlight methodological challenges and provide guidance on how to consider these when planning and reporting research for more robust psychological science in this field. Taken together, we believe this work will help disentangle the complex relationship between stress and health behaviour and build a cumulative evidence base to pave the way for interventions.
Date of Publication
2026-03-06
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
100 Philosophy > 150 Psychology
Keyword(s)
Stress
•
ecological momentary assessment
•
experience sampling
•
health behaviour
•
intensive longitudinal methods
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Inauen, Jenniferorcid-logo
Institute of Psychology, Health Psychology and Behavioral Medicine
Allan, Julia
Aulbach, Matthias Burkard
Blechert, Jens
Bamert, Melanie
Institute of Psychology, Health Psychology and Behavioral Medicine
Lüthi, Simone
Powell, Daniel
Ruf, Alea
O'Connor, Daryl B
Additional Credits
Institute of Psychology, Health Psychology and Behavioral Medicine
Series
Health Psychology Review
Publisher
Taylor and Francis Group
ISSN
1743-7202
1743-7199
Access(Rights)
open.access
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