The Biopsychosocial Model (HL IB Psychology)

Revision Note

Laura Swash

Expertise

Psychology Content Creator

Explanation of the biopsychosocial model

  • The biopsychosocial model (BPS) sees health as being holistically influenced by:

    • biological factors - such as genetics, hormone levels, brain and anatomy

    • psychological  factors - such as individual dispositions and health beliefs, coping skills, emotions

    • sociocultural factors - such as socioeconomic status, social support, relationships, living conditions

  • The BPS model was proposed in 1977 by the psychiatrist George Engel to replace the earlier biomedical model of health 

  • Engel argued that the biomedical model was reductionist, because it focused on the body as separate from the mind (and on parts of the body as separate entities), ignoring the interaction between them

Exam Tip

When writing your introduction to an answer on the biopsychosocial model, remember to include how the model developed from the previous biomedical model and identify the difference between them. You will be looking separately at biological, cognitive and sociocultural explanations for the health problem of stress later in this health unit. Understanding the biopsychosocial model will help you also to answer a question about the interactions between any of these explanations.

Biopsychological 1

Playing games with friends is an interaction of the biological, psychological and social that contributes to health and well-being

Research which investigates the biopsychosocial model

  • Marmot et al. (1997) found a correlation between low control over one’s work and heart disease

  • Suls and Rothman (2004) found that health psychologists have acknowledged the biopsychosocial model and reference it in their research, but their studies are not focused enough on the links between the biological, psychological and social domains

Both Marmot et al. (1997) and Suls and Rothman (2004)  are available as ‘Two Key Studies of the Biopsychosocial model’ – just navigate to the next section of the Biopsychosocial Model  topic to find them.

Evaluation of the biopsychosocial model

Strengths

  • The biopsychosocial model of health and well-being recognises the role of social inequalities in the development of health problems and so can take a proactive approach to illness prevention

  • The model is empowering for individuals as it gives them some control over their health by taking their experiences and emotions into account

Limitations

  • The model is very complex and it can be difficult to isolate the variables that are responsible for a health problem when focusing on the biopsychosocial interaction between them

  • The identification of psychological factors such as disposition and personality type as being involved in illnesses like heart disease can lead to patients blaming themselves for their lack of health, which is counter-productive

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Laura Swash

Author: Laura Swash

Laura has been teaching for 31 years and is a teacher of GCSE, A level and IB Diploma psychology, in the UK and overseas and now online. She is a senior examiner, freelance psychology teacher and teacher trainer. Laura also writes a blog, textbooks and online content to support all psychology courses. She lives on a small Portuguese island in the Atlantic where, when she is not online or writing, she loves to scuba dive, cycle and garden.