Abstract
 Examination of theories in health psychology over the twentieth century  reveals parallel shifts in models describing the subject of psychology  and a consistent realignment between this subject and the environment. A  similar reconfiguration of the individual can also be seen within  medical and health care discourses about risks to health. These changes  are discussed in terms of the interrelationship between theory (the  discipline of health psychology), the theory's subject (the individual)  and methodology. 
