The Nature and Treatment of the Stress Response A Practical Guide for Clinicians

Barely more than twenty years ago the inquiry into the nature and implications of the psychophysiologic stress response seemed to be restricted to laboratory animals. Today, however, scientists from a wide range of disciplines are studying stress and its implications for human health and disease. Th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Everly Jr., George S., Rosenfeld, R. (Author)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: New York, NY Springer US 1981, 1981
Edition:1st ed. 1981
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer Book Archives -2004 - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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245 0 0 |a The Nature and Treatment of the Stress Response  |h Elektronische Ressource  |b A Practical Guide for Clinicians  |c by George S. Everly Jr., R. Rosenfeld 
250 |a 1st ed. 1981 
260 |a New York, NY  |b Springer US  |c 1981, 1981 
300 |a 232 p  |b online resource 
505 0 |a One The Stress Response and Its Treatment -- 1 What is Stress? -- Two The Nature of the Stress Response -- 2 The Nervous Systems and the Stress Response -- 3 From Stress to Disease -- 4 The Measurement of the Stress Response -- Three The Treatment of the Stress Response -- 5 Self-Responsibility as a Therapeutic Force -- 6 Dietary Recommendations and the Stress Response -- 7 The Pharmacological Treatment of the Stress Response -- 8 The Clinical Use of Relaxation Techniques: General Considerations -- 9 Meditation -- 10 Neuromuscular Relaxation -- 11 Voluntary Control of Respiration Patterns in the Reduction of Excessive Stress -- 12 Biofeedback in the Treatment of the Stress Response -- 13 Healthful Expression of the Stress Response through Physical Exercise -- 14 The Use of Hypnosis in the Treatment of the Stress Response -- 15 Putting It All Together: Holism and Holistic Treatment of the Stress Response -- Appendix A Relaxation Training Report -- Appendix B Physically Passive Neuromuscular Relaxation -- Appendix C Professional Associations and Journals as Resources on the Topic of Stress -- References -- About the Authors 
653 |a Clinical psychology 
653 |a Counseling Psychology 
653 |a Clinical Psychology 
653 |a Behavioral Sciences and Psychology 
653 |a Psychology 
653 |a Counseling 
700 1 |a Rosenfeld, R.  |e [author] 
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520 |a Barely more than twenty years ago the inquiry into the nature and implications of the psychophysiologic stress response seemed to be restricted to laboratory animals. Today, however, scientists from a wide range of disciplines are studying stress and its implications for human health and disease. This may be because our technical ability actually to measure the phenomenon has increased, as has our understanding of human psychophysiology. Just as important, how­ ever, may be the fact that we have entered a new era of disease. According to Kenneth Pelletier, we have entered upon an era in which stress plays a dominant role in the determination of human disease. Pelletier has stated that up to 90% of all disease may be stress-related. Whether this estimation seems inflated or not, the fact remains that clinicians of all kinds, including physicians, psychologists, physical therapists, social workers, and counselors, are daily being confronted with clients suffering from excessive psychophysiologic stress arousal. This fact has created a need to know more about the stress response and its treatment. Although more and more health-care professionals are directly or indirectly working with clients who manifest excessive stress, there has been no text previously written which attempted to condensE' between the covers of a single volume a practical, clinically compre­ hensive discussion of what stress is (as best we currently understand it) and how to treat it when it becomes excessive