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| Psychologies - East and West Seminar: April 1975
WAYS OF HEALING
A Special Weekend Symposium
Office of Continuing Medical Education and Department of Psychiatry
In cooperation with The Institute for the Study of Human Knowledge In the West today, there is increasing concern with humanistic and psychosocial aspects of medicine, as well as holistic and ecological perspectives. The outstanding achievements of modern medicine are known to all of us-the control of infectious diseases, development of surgical procedures, and the management of diseases using biomedical technology. These advances have resulted from Western emphasis on analytic techniques and technical solutions to problems of health and disease. Other systems of medicine-Chinese, Hippocratic and American Indian-have developed along other lines, with different emphases, concerns and specializations. An open-minded examination of these different approaches may give us new perspectives about our own current medical effort; including the health-oriented and educative aspects of medical care and the development of techniques to enable individuals to take more active roles in their own health care. This weekend symposium presents speakers who are key participants in the emerging trend to synthesize modern medicine with those elements of ancient medicine that are appropriate to our own culture. Ample time is provided for questions and discussion. Saturday, April 19 Morning Session 9:00-10:30 Holistic Approaches in Ancient and Contemporary Medicine: An Introduction
10:30-12:00 Hippocrates in Modern Dress
Afternoon Session 2:00-3:30 Navajo Indian Medicine and Medicine Men
3:30-5:00 Chinese Medicine and Acupuncture: Theory, Practice and Research
Sunday, April 20 Morning Session 9:00-10:30 Psychological Factors in Healing
10:30-12:00 Biofeedback, Meditation and the Voluntary Control of Internal States
Afternoon Session 2:00-3:30 New Discussions in Health Care
3:30-5:00 The Wisdom of the Body: Man Adapting
The Faculty ROBERT L BERGMAN, M.D., is Chief of Mental Health Programs, Indian Health Service, and for the past eight years has been practicing psychiatry among the American Indian people and working closely with Navajo medicine men. He has written several papers on the relationship of Western and Indian traditions of healing and is currently a clinical associate in the Department of Psychiatry, University of New Mexico, and a faculty member of the medicine man training school at Rough Rock, Arizona. RENE DUBOS, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of the Rockefeller University, is a microbiologist and experimental pathologist. His early research included work on the development of antimicrobial drugs. More recently he has been studying the effects that environmental forces-physicochemical, biological, and social-exert on human life. Dr. Dubois is also well known as an author and lecturer. His books include: The Mirage of Health; Man Adapting; Man, Medicine and Environment; So Human an Animal; and Beast or Angel: Choices that Make Us Human. JEROME D. FRANK, M.D., Ph. D., Professor Psychiatry Emeritus, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, is an eminent researcher and clinician in the field of psychotherapy. His major research interest has been the elucidation of the healing components shared by all methods of psychotherapy, about which he has written numerous research papers and a book, Persuasion and Healing. MATHEW LEE, M.D., M.P.H., Professor of Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine, New York University Medical Center; Professor of Special Care, New York University School of Dentistry; serves as Coordinator of Acupuncture Research, NYU Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine; and investigates the use of acupuncture in dental analgesia and pain control. He recently visited China as a member of a medical delegation. GARY E. SCHWARTZ, Ph.D., is Assistant Professor of Personality Psychology, Department of Psychology and Social Relations, Harvard University; and also Chief of Psychophysiology, Erich Lindemann Mental Health Center, Massachusetts General Hospital. His principal research interests are in biofeedback and the cognitive control of psychophysiological processes and treatment of psychosomatic disorders. He is the author of numerous papers in these areas and is an editor of the forthcoming volumes Biofeedback: Theory and Research and Consciousness and Self Regulation: Advances in Research. DAVID S. SOBEL is Executive Director of the Institute for the Study of Human Knowledge and a student in medicine at the University of California School of Medicine in San Francisco. He is currently editing a book Ways of Health which deals with the subjects and perspectives presented in this symposium.
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