Spiritual and health care providers need to be particularly aware of professional border crossings and irregularities. There is a tendency to encourage more sympathetic and unformal people to treat their patients, customers are making this awareness increasingly important. Professional borders ethics has been incorporated into the professional norms of many spiritual and medical service providers throughout the country but it is important to continue education throughout the year (Al Sayyari, Hejaili, Jamal, Shamsi and Tamim , 2010).
Ronald Anderson wrote in the Journal of Health and Social Behavior that there is a behavior pattern to decide searching for medical services (Anderson, 1995). In collaboration with Odin Anderson, Anderson wrote the "Initial Behavior Model" in 1968 (Andersen & Anderson, 1967) to support analysis of nationwide survey data collected by the University of Chicago Health Management Research Center and the National Opinion Poll Center. This model describes several factors that determine whether an individual accesses medical services.
The conceptual framework of this research is based on Anderson's Healthcare Usage Behavior Model. Many research on medical use is based on Adersen behavior model. This model consists of three main factors: susceptibility, facilitation, and necessity. The factor of sensitivity is that individuals tend to use healthcare such as demographic characteristics (age, sex, marital status) and social structure (occupation, education, ethnicity, religion). Preferred factors include the ability of individuals to use medical services and include family and regional resources that may affect the use of health care. The necessary factor is that individuals need health care by expressing the perceived health condition and the symptoms of chronic diseases and disorders.
The term "example" is from sociologist Robert K. Merton. He discovered that people tend to model behavior rather than model individual actions. The set of actions may contain contradictory ideas that do not necessarily work well. It is not unusual to capture a set of ideal character models according to another ideal set. All of these behaviors are part of the same group. Albert Bandura, a psychologist, often finds that individuals are actively observing their environment, paying attention to the behavior others show, and imitating them. This helps to identify the cause and effect of a particular action. Bandura's work is not only responsive to the human environment but also an important step in understanding how humans learn from others actively.