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Springer Series on Stress and Coping
Second Edition, 2002

Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
A Clinical Guide to the Treatment of the Human Stress Response
Ist Teil von
  • Springer Series on Stress and Coping
Auflage
Second Edition
Ort / Verlag
Boston, MA : Springer US
Erscheinungsjahr
2002
Link zum Volltext
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • The Concept of Stress -- The Anatomy and Physiology of the Human Stress Response -- The Link from Stress Arousal to Disease -- Stress-Related Disease -- Psychoneuroimmunology -- Measurement of the Human Stress Response -- Personologic Diathesis and Human Stress -- Control and the Human Stress Response -- Psychotherapy -- A Neurophysiological Rationale for the Use of the Relaxation Response -- Meditation -- Voluntary Control of Respiration Patterns -- Neuromuscular Relaxation -- Hypnosis in the Management of Stress Reactions -- Biofeedback in the Treatment of the Stress Response -- Physical Exercise and the Human Stress Response -- The Pharmacological Management of Stress Reactions -- Religion, Spirituality, and Stress -- Nutrition and Stress -- Posttraumatic Stress Disorder -- Management of Acute Distress through a Comprehensive Model of Crisis Intervention for Mass Disasters and Terrorism -- Hans Selye and the Birth of the Stress Concept -- Summation and Conclusions
  • Over a decade has passed since the first edition of this critically acclaimed volume was published. Much is new, but much has remained the same. The reader will find that the primary efferent biological mechanisms of the stress response are largely the same as described in 1989. This underscores the br- liance of Selye, Cannon, Mason, Gellhorn, and Levi as they sought to elu- date the anatomical and physiological constituents of human stress. New information has been generated regarding the microanatomy, biochemistry, and genetic aspects of the human stress response. Furthermore, the anatomy and physiology of posttraumatic stress has been more thoroughly elucidated. The important role of cognitive processes in the determination of sub- quent stress arousal remains underscored and has been empirically validated by subsequent research (Smith, Everly, & Johns, 1992, 1993). The “redisc- ery” of the importance of positive psychology and optimism is consistent with our earlier etiological emphasis upon the cognitive–affective domain in the overall phenomenology of human stress