학술논문

Implementation intention and planning interventions in Health Psychology: Recommendations from the Synergy Expert Group for research and practice
Document Type
article
Source
Psychology and Health. 31(7)
Subject
Clinical and Health Psychology
Social and Personality Psychology
Psychology
Good Health and Well Being
Behavioral Medicine
Behavioral Research
Forecasting
Health Planning
Humans
Intention
implementation intentions
planning
volition
if-then plans
goal striving
cues-to-action
Curriculum and Pedagogy
Clinical Psychology
Public health
Clinical and health psychology
Social and personality psychology
Language
Abstract
The current article details a position statement and recommendations for future research and practice on planning and implementation intentions in health contexts endorsed by the Synergy Expert Group. The group comprised world-leading researchers in health and social psychology and behavioural medicine who convened to discuss priority issues in planning interventions in health contexts and develop a set of recommendations for future research and practice. The expert group adopted a nominal groups approach and voting system to elicit and structure priority issues in planning interventions and implementation intentions research. Forty-two priority issues identified in initial discussions were further condensed to 18 key issues, including definitions of planning and implementation intentions and 17 priority research areas. Each issue was subjected to voting for consensus among group members and formed the basis of the position statement and recommendations. Specifically, the expert group endorsed statements and recommendations in the following areas: generic definition of planning and specific definition of implementation intentions, recommendations for better testing of mechanisms, guidance on testing the effects of moderators of planning interventions, recommendations on the social aspects of planning interventions, identification of the preconditions that moderate effectiveness of planning interventions and recommendations for research on how people use plans.