The Comprehensive Handbook of Behavioral Medicine :
[Book]
Volume 1: Systems Intervention
edited by James M. Ferguson, C. Barr Taylor.
Dordrecht
Springer Netherlands
1980
(303 pages)
To The Cardiovascular System --; 1. Pattern A Behaviors And Heart Disease: Intervention Approaches --; 2. Behavioral and Psychophysiological Aspects Of Raynaud's Disease --; 3. Psychological Treatment Of Cardiac Arrhythmias --; 4. Behavioral Approaches To Hypertension --; 5. Cardiac Rehabilitation: Current Status and Future Prospects --; To The Musculoskeletal System --; 6. Major Trends in Exercise Physiology: Recent Findings And Their Implications For Perfection Of The Human Organism --; 7. Behavioral Approaches to Exercise Habits and Athletic Performance --; 8. Stroke and Rehabilitation --; To The Central Nervous System --; 9. How Plastic Is The Nervous System? --; 10. A Systems Approach For The Assessment and Treatment of Memory Problems --; 11. Treating The Complaint of Insomnia: Self-Management Perspectives --; To Psychoneuroendocrinology --; 12. Conditioned Endocrine Responses --; To The Genitourinary System --; 13. Enuresis --; 14. Treatment Of Common Male And Female Sexual Concerns.
Many of the greatest strides in medical care have neither been glamorous nor made the front page of The New York Times. They have been simple measures such as sanitation, immunization, and provision of clean, whole some food. And even more glamorous medical breakthroughs and tech niques like heart transplants are often last-ditch responses to largely preventable medical problems that required a lifetime to develop. Chang ing those life styles which may cause, worsen, or exacerbate disease and uti lizing current medical knowledge may be the most important strides medicine will make in the next few decades. To meet this challenge, tech niques have already been developed to change eating and nutritional pat terns that may lead to obesity and heart disease. In addition, interventions are being developed for a wide variety of medical problems. Many of these techniques are based on behavioral principles. Several years ago, one of the editors of this book gave a behavioral medi cine seminar for psychiatry residents concerning behavioral principles and their application to medicine. As the seminar developed, it became evident that many of the important articles on the subject were scattered through out a wide body of literature, which encompassed a variety of disciplines and journals. No single source was available to provide the state of the art of this emerging field. This book was spawned, in part, as an attempt to overcome this deficit.