Handbook of life stress, cognition and health:
Gespeichert in:
Weitere Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Chichester [u.a.]
Wiley
1988
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXXIII, 750 S. |
ISBN: | 0471912697 |
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adam_text | Titel: Handbook of life stress, cognition and health
Autor: Fisher, Shirley
Jahr: 1988
Contents
List of Contributors....................................................................... xix
Preface..................................................................................... xxiii
Shirley Fisher
Background to the Handbook......................................................... xxiii
The Importance of Cognitive Factors................................................ xxiv
The Psychobiological Basis of Illness................................................ xxix
The Organization of the Volume...................................................... xxx
Final Comments.......................................................................... xxx
References............................................................................... xxxi
Acknowledgements.................................................................... xxxii
Section IA: Specific Life Stresses
Chapter 1 Expectant Parenthood................................................... 3
Yona Teichman
Introduction............................................................................... 3
Becoming a Mother...................................................................... 3
Becoming a Father........................................................................ 12
The Expectant Couple................................................................... 16
Is Expectant Parenthood a Crisis?..................................................... 18
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 19
References................................................................................. 19
Chapter 2 Stress in Childhood and Adolescence................................... 23
Ian Goodyer
Introduction............................................................................... 23
Infancy and the Preschool Child....................................................... 23
Stress and Middle Childhood........................................................... 25
Stress and Adolescence.................................................................. 26
The Perception of Stress................................................................. 27
Life Events and Psychiatric Disorder................................................. 28
The Stress of Everyday Life............................................................. 34
Buffering and Protective Factors Against Stress................................... 34
vii
V1H CONTENTS
Ongoing Stressful Difficulties.......................................................... 35
Patterning and Multiple Stresses...................................................... 35
Disaster, Coping and Adjustment..................................................... 36
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 36
References................................................................................. 37
Chapter 3 Leaving Home: Homesickness and the Psychological
Effects of Change and Transition...................................... 41
Shirley Fisher
Introduction............................................................................... 41
Theoretical Explanations of the Effects of Transition............................. 42
Studies of the Effects of Relocation................................................... 44
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 56
References................................................................................. 57
Chapter 4 Bereavement.............................................................. 61
Frances Clegg
Definitions and Conceptual Approaches............................................ 61
Stage Models of Loss..................................................................... 64
The Normal/Abnormal Continuum................................................... 66
Undesirable Outcomes Following Bereavement................................... 67
Intervention with Bereaved People................................................... 70
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 73
References................................................................................. 74
Chapter 5 Impending Surgery....................................................... 79
Marie Johnston
Introduction............................................................................... 79
What is Stressful about Surgery?...................................................... 79
Evidence of Stress in Surgical Patients............................................... 80
Moderators of Surgical Stress.......................................................... 87
Implications of Preoperative Stress................................................... 92
Psychological Preparation for Surgery............................................... 94
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 96
References................................................................................. 97
Chapter 6 Victims of Violence...................................................... 101
Ronnie Janoff-Bulman
Introduction............................................................................... 101
Fear and Anxiety.......................................................................... 102
Assumptive Worlds...................................................................... 103
Core Assumptions........................................................................ 104
Coping and Inappropriate* Reactions............................................... 106
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 109
References................................................................................. 110
CONTENTS IX
Chapter 7 Environmental and Nuclear Threats................................. 115
Jennifer Brown
Introduction............................................................................... 115
Definitions, Classifications and Underlying Dimensions........................ 116
Effects of Environmental Stressors................................................... 117
Methodological Issues................................................................... 118
Theoretical Background................................................................ 118
Nuclear Threats........................................................................... 123
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 130
References................................................................................. 131
Section IB: Stressful Social Contexts
Chapter 8 Marriage, Separation and Divorce.................................... 137
Raymond Cochrane
Some Basic Data on Marital Status and Health..................................... 137
Stress and Marital Status................................................................ 140
An Extended Model of Stress, Coping and Illness................................. 143
The Marital Process...................................................................... 149
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 156
References................................................................................. 156
Chapter 9 FamilyStress............................................................... 161
Abe Fosson
The Importance of Family Stress: An Introduction................................ 161
Ways that Families Stress............................................................... 162
Patterns of Organization................................................................ 162
Transitions................................................................................. 165
Role Difficulties........................................................................... 170
Personal Attributes of an Individual Family Member............................. 170
Flow of Affect............................................................................. 171
Patterns of Communication............................................................ 171
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 173
References................................................................................. 173
Chapter 10 Women s Work and Family Roles: Sources of Stress and
Sources of Strength..................................................... 175
Janet E. Malley and Abigaii J. Stewart
Introduction............................................................................... 175
Agency and Communion................................................................ 176
Family Roles and Relationships....................................................... 177
Family Roles Defined by Absent Relationships.................................... 180
Agency, Communion, and the Work Role.......................................... 183
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 187
References................................................................................. 188
CONTENTS
Chapter 11 Psychosocial Factors in the Workplace............................. 193
Rudolf H. Moos
Introduction............................................................................... 193
Three Domains of Work Climate...................................................... 194
The Determinants of Work Climate.................................................. 197
The Impact of Work Climate........................................................... 200
Personal Characteristics as Moderating Factors.................................... 203
Future Prospects.......................................................................... 205
Summary and Conclusions............................................................... 207
References................................................................................. 207
Chapter 12 The Experience of Unemployment in Social Context........... 211
David Fryer
What is the Experience of Unemployment?......................................... 211
How Much Confidence can be Placed in the Findings?........................... 218
Variations in the Experience of Unemployment and Focus of Research...... 219
What is it about unemployment which Causes Psychological Distress......... 226
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 230
References................................................................................. 231
Section II: Life Events and Disorder
Chapter 13 Life Events and Mental Disorder.................................... 241
Eugene Paykel and D. Dowlatshahi
Methodological Aspects................................................................. 241
Life Events and Onset of Depression................................................. 243
Endogenous Depression................................................................ 245
Bipolar Manic Depressive Disorder.................................................. 246
Life Events and Outcome of Depression............................................. 247
Neurotic Disorders....................................................................... 248
Schizophrenia............................................................................. 248
Attempted Suicide........................................................................ 250
Completed Suicide....................................................................... 252
Effect Size and Modifying Factors..................................................... 255
The Future of Life Event Research in Psychiatry.................................. 256
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 258
References................................................................................. 258
Chapter 14 Lethal Stress: A Social-Behavioral Model of Suicidal
Behavior.................................................................. 265
Marsha M. Linehan and Edward N. Shearin
Introduction............................................................................... 265
Definitions and Methodological Issues............................................... 266
Stress........................................................................................ 268
Social-Behavioral Theory of Suicidal Behaviors................................... 269
Origins of Stress.................,......................................................... 271
CONTENTS XI
Vulnerability Factors.................................................................... 276
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 279
References................................................................................. 280
Chapter 15 Life Events, Stress and Addiction................................... 287
Fiona O Doherty and John Booth Da vies
Introduction............................................................................... 287
The Evidence.............................................................................. 289
A Proposed Model of the Addiction Process........................................ 296
Overview................................................................................... 297
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 299
References................................................................................. 299
Chapter 16 Stress and Heart Disease.............................................. 301
Bruce Boman
Introduction............................................................................... 301
Type A Behaviour and Ischaemic Heart Disease.................................. 301
Life Events and Coronary Pathology................................................. 304
Neurotic Symptoms, Character Styles and Coronary Heart Disease.......... 305
Family, Employment, Lifestyle Stresses and Coronary Heart Disease........ 306
Stresses Associated with Transgressing Sociocultural and Economic
Boundaries.............................................................................. 308
Social Support and Coronary Heart Disease........................................ 308
Bereavement and Coronary Heart Disease......................................... 309
Major Stresses............................................................................. 310
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 311
References................................................................................. 312
Chapter 17 Recent Life Changes and Coronary Heart Disease:
10 Years Research...................................................... 317
Richard Rahe
Introduction............................................................................... 317
Recent Life Change and Coronary Heart Disease................................. 318
Emotions and Behavior................................................................. 326
Rehabilitation............................................................................. 328
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 330
References................................................................................. 331
Chapter 18 Stress. Disability and Handicap...................................... 335
Christina Knussen and Cliff C. Cunningham
Introduction............................................................................... 335
Disability and Handicap................................................................. 335
Stressand Disability: Theory........................................................... 337
Stress and Disability: Research Studies.............................................. 341
Social Support............................................................................. 344
Aspects of Control........................................................................ 345
Xll CONTENTS
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 348
References................................................................................. 348
Chapter 19 Anorexia Nervosa....................................................... 351
Rachel Bryant-Waugh
Introduction............................................................................... 351
Adolescence............................................................................... 352
Family Factors............................................................................. 355
Sociocultural Factors..................................................................... 357
Individual/ Personality Factors....................................................... 360
Physical/Illness Factors.................................................................. 361
School Factors............................................................................. 363
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 364
References................................................................................. 365
Chapter 20 Personality, Life Stress and Cancerous Disease.................. 369
Cary L. Cooper
Introduction............................................................................... 369
The Relationship of Psychological Factors to Cancer............................. 369
Personality Dispositions and Cancer................................................. 371
Life Events and Cancer.................................................................. 374
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 379
References................................................................................. 380
Chapter 21 Stress and Diabetes..................................................... 383
Clare Bradley
Introduction............................................................................... 383
The Pathophysiology of Diabetes Mellitus.......................................... 383
The Classification of Diabetes......................................................... 384
Complications of Diabetes.............................................................. 385
Variability of Glycaemic Control...................................................... 386
Diabetes as a Stressor.................................................................... 386
Stress and Diabetes Onset.............................................................. 387
The Effects of Stress on Diabetes Control........................................... 389
Stress Management and Diabetes Control.......................................... 394
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 397
References................................................................................. 398
Section III: Cognitive Factors which Influence Stress and Health
Chapter 22 Stress and Cognitive Failure.......................................... 405
James Reason
Introduction............................................................................... 405
Extreme Stress and Real-Life Failures: A Brief Overview....................... 406
Stress is not a Necessary Condition for Cognitive Failure........................ 407
Proneness to Cognitive Failure: A Stable Disposition............................ 408
CONTENTS XH1
Cognitive Failure and Vulnerability to Stress....................................... 409
What do Cognitive Failures Questionnaires Measure?........................... 412
Cognitive Failures and Psychiatric Symptomatology.............................. 414
Stress and Custodial Attention....................................................... 414
Mood States and Daily Error Ratings................................................ 415
Reconciling State and Trait: Cognitive Underspecification..................... 416
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 419
References................................................................................. 419
Chapter 23 Explanation and Adaptation in Adversity......................... 423
Chris R. Brewin
Introduction............................................................................... 423
Labelling.................................................................................... 424
Causal Attribution........................................................................ 426
Moral Evaluation......................................................................... 433
Self-presentation.......................................................................... 435
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 436
References................................................................................. 437
Chapter 24 Early Loss of Parent and Depression in Adult Life............... 441
George W. Brown
Introduction............................................................................... 441
The Walthamstow Study................................................................ 444
Early Loss of Mother and Experience of Lack of Care............................ 446
A Life History Approach................................................................ 452
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 460
References................................................................................. 462
Chapter 25 Trait Anxiety and Stress............................................... 467
Michael W. Eysenck
Introduction............................................................................... 467
The Cognitive Approach................................................................ 469
Low Trait Anxiety........................................................................ 477
Theoretical Speculations................................................................ 478
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 480
References................................................................................. 481
Chapter 26 Learned Resourcefulness, Stress and Self-regulation........... 483
Michael Rosenhauni
Introduction............................................................................... 483
Definition of Personality Repertoires................................................ 484
Stress and the Three Phases of Self-regulation...................................... 484
The Role of Personality Repertoires in Self-regulation........................... 486
Learned Resourcefulness and the Use of Self-control Methods................ 488
Learned Resourcefulness and Anticipatory Self-regulation..................... 489
Implications................................................................................ 490
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 492
XIV CONTENTS
Appendix: Psychometric Characteristics of the Self-control
Schedule (SCS)......................................................................... 493
References................................................................................. 494
Chapter 27 Putting the Life Back into Life Events : Toward a Cognitive
Social Learning Analysis of the Coping Process.................. 497
Suzanne M. Miller and Adina Birnbaum
Introduction............................................................................... 497
Some Promising Approaches to Individual Differences in
Information Processing............................................................... 498
Styles of Information Processing under Threat: Monitoring and Blunting ... 499
A Research Illustration: Aims and Methods........................................ 500
Major Results: Health Implications of Monitoring................................ 502
Some Implications for the Study of Life Events.................................... 504
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 505
References................................................................................. 506
Chapter 28 Social Support and Stress: Perspectives and Processes.......... 511
Jacques A.M. Winnubst, Bram P. Buunk and Frans H.G. Marcelissen
Introduction............................................................................... 511
The Conceptualization of Social Support: Four Perspectives................... 512
Social Support as a Social Psychological Process................................... 517
Social Support and Occupational Stress.............................................. 518
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 525
References................................................................................. 526
Section IV: Social Cognitive and Biological Models of Stress and Illness
Chapter 29 Stress, Language and Illness.......................................... 531
Richard Totrnan
Introduction............................................................................... 531
Psychoneuroimmunology............................................................... 532
Psychological Stress...................................................................... 533
Language and Language Games....................................................... 536
Stress: Maladaptive and Adaptive.................................................... 538
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 541
References................................................................................. 541
Chapter 30 Life Events, Social Cognition and Depression.................... 543
Keith Oatley
Introduction............................................................................... 543
Instrumental Schemata and Social Schemata....................................... 544
Evidence from Studies of Life Events................................................ 549
Cognitive Evaluation of Life Events.................................................. 552
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 555
References................................................................................. 556
CONTENTS XV
Chapter 31 Psychobiological Interaction in Depression....................... 559
Paul Gilbert
Introduction............................................................................... 559
Biomedical Approaches................................................................. 560
Environment-Animal Interactions and Psychobiological Processes.......... 566
Human Appraisal and Symbolic Codes.............................................. 573
Toward a Psychobiological Model.................................................... 574
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 576
References................................................................................. 576
Chapter 32 Life Stress, Control Strategies and the Risk of Disease:
A Psychobiological Model............................................ 581
Shirley Fisher
Life Stresses and Health................................................................. 581
Models of Common Denominators of Life Stress Events........................ 586
The Biological States of Stress......................................................... 589
Stress, Decision and the Proclivity to Illness........................................ 597
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 600
References................................................................................. 600
Chapter 33 Psychobiological Factors in Stress and Health.................... 603
Tom Cox
Introduction............................................................................... 603
The Definition of Health................................................................ 604
The Nature of Suboptimum Health................................................... 604
The Definition of Stress................................................................. 607
Coping and Control...................................................................... 608
The Likely Mechanisms Relating Stress and Health............................... 609
Common Pathways: Physiological Responses to Stress........................... 610
Stress and the Immune System......................................................... 612
A Model of Stress and Cancer.......................................................... 615
Stress and other Diseases................................................................ 616
StressandAIDS........................................................................... 616
Situational and Behavioural Control of Pituitary-Adrenal Cortical
Activity under Stress.................................................................. 617
Post-traumatic Stress Disorder........................................................ 619
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 622
References................................................................................. 623
Chapter 34 Allostasis: A New Paradigm to Explain Arousal Pathology.... 629
Peter Sterling and Joseph Eyer
Introduction............................................................................... 629
Homeostasis versus Allostasis...............................................,......... 631
Mechanisms of Allostasis............................................................... 636
Allostatic Regulation of the Immune Response.................................... 638
Regulation of Arousal................,................................................., 540
XVI CONTENTS
Pathology from Chronic Arousal...................................................... 642
Definitions of Health and Approaches to Therapeutics.......................... 642
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 646
References................................................................................. 647
Section V: Cognitive Developments with Implications for Coping
and Health
Chapter 35 Helping People Cope with the Long-term Effects of Stress .... 653
Ian Howarth and Inez Dootjes Dussuyer
Introduction............................................................................... 653
Evaluations of Professional Help...................................................... 654
Factors Affecting Resistance to Stress................................................ 656
Experimental Studies of Helping...................................................... 659
Is a Synthesis Possible?.................................................................. 662
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 664
References................................................................................. 664
Chapter 36 Confiding Traumatic Experiences and Health.................... 669
James W. Pennebaker
Introduction............................................................................... 669
Inhibition of Thoughts, Feelings and Behaviours Requires Physiological
Work..................................................................................... 670
Disclosure of Traumatic Events is Physically and Cognitively Beneficial..... 671
Possible Explanations for the Value of Confronting Traumas................... 675
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 680
References................................................................................. 681
Chapter 37 Stress and Mental Control............................................. 683
Daniel M. Wegner
Introduction............................................................................... 683
Forms of Mental Control................................................................ 683
Origins of Obsession..................................................................... 685
Thought Suppression and Obsession................................................. 691
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 695
References................................................................................. 697
Chapter 38 The Costs and Benefits of Coping.................................... 699
Wolfgang Schonpflug and Wolfgang Battmann
Introduction............................................................................... 699
Resources.................................................................................. 699
Benefits: Savings of and Gains in Resources........................................ 700
Failure: Absence of Benefits Despite Coping Attempts.......................... 701
Problem Generation: New Sources of Costs as Results of
Coping Attempts....................................................................... 701
Operational Costs of Coping........................................................... 702
CONTENTS XV11
Benefits and Costs of Supports......................................................... 704
Effective Coping as a Resource Management Process............................ 704
When Costs Exceed the Benefits: Deliberate Disengagement.................. 706
Some Applications: Costs and Benefits of Cooperation, Planning
and Feedback........................................................................... 707
Summary and Conclusions.............................................................. 711
References................................................................................. 711
Author Index.............................................................................. 715
Subject Index.............................................................................. 743
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id | DE-604.BV000888896 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T15:21:06Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0471912697 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-000558431 |
oclc_num | 17234042 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-91 DE-BY-TUM DE-384 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-703 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-20 DE-824 DE-29 DE-83 DE-11 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-91 DE-BY-TUM DE-384 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-703 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-20 DE-824 DE-29 DE-83 DE-11 DE-188 |
physical | XXXIII, 750 S. |
publishDate | 1988 |
publishDateSearch | 1988 |
publishDateSort | 1988 |
publisher | Wiley |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Handbook of life stress, cognition and health [ed. by:] Shirley Fisher ... Chichester [u.a.] Wiley 1988 XXXIII, 750 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Cognition Médecine psychosomatique Santé Stress Stress gtt Health Life Change Events Medicine, Psychosomatic Stress (Psychology) Stress, Psychological Psychosomatik (DE-588)4076418-7 gnd rswk-swf Gesundheit (DE-588)4020754-7 gnd rswk-swf Kognition (DE-588)4031630-0 gnd rswk-swf Stress (DE-588)4058047-7 gnd rswk-swf Stress (DE-588)4058047-7 s Kognition (DE-588)4031630-0 s Gesundheit (DE-588)4020754-7 s DE-604 Psychosomatik (DE-588)4076418-7 s Fisher, Shirley edt HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=000558431&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Handbook of life stress, cognition and health Cognition Médecine psychosomatique Santé Stress Stress gtt Health Life Change Events Medicine, Psychosomatic Stress (Psychology) Stress, Psychological Psychosomatik (DE-588)4076418-7 gnd Gesundheit (DE-588)4020754-7 gnd Kognition (DE-588)4031630-0 gnd Stress (DE-588)4058047-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4076418-7 (DE-588)4020754-7 (DE-588)4031630-0 (DE-588)4058047-7 |
title | Handbook of life stress, cognition and health |
title_auth | Handbook of life stress, cognition and health |
title_exact_search | Handbook of life stress, cognition and health |
title_full | Handbook of life stress, cognition and health [ed. by:] Shirley Fisher ... |
title_fullStr | Handbook of life stress, cognition and health [ed. by:] Shirley Fisher ... |
title_full_unstemmed | Handbook of life stress, cognition and health [ed. by:] Shirley Fisher ... |
title_short | Handbook of life stress, cognition and health |
title_sort | handbook of life stress cognition and health |
topic | Cognition Médecine psychosomatique Santé Stress Stress gtt Health Life Change Events Medicine, Psychosomatic Stress (Psychology) Stress, Psychological Psychosomatik (DE-588)4076418-7 gnd Gesundheit (DE-588)4020754-7 gnd Kognition (DE-588)4031630-0 gnd Stress (DE-588)4058047-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Cognition Médecine psychosomatique Santé Stress Health Life Change Events Medicine, Psychosomatic Stress (Psychology) Stress, Psychological Psychosomatik Gesundheit Kognition |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=000558431&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT fishershirley handbookoflifestresscognitionandhealth |