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| Psychologies - East and West Seminar: January 1976
WAYS OF HEALING:
January 24-25, 1976 The University of California San Francisco
In the West today, there is increasing concern with the humanistic and psychosocial aspects of medicine, as well as the promotion of holistic and ecological perspectives. While the outstanding achievements of modern medicine are known to all of us-the control of infectious diseases, development of surgical procedures and biomedical technology, and the management of diseases in the hospital setting-these advances have resulted largely from a Western emphasis on analytic techniques and technical solutions to problems of health and disease. Systems of medicine such as Chinese, Tibetan, Yogic, American Indian, and various folk traditions have developed with different specializations and concerns including valuable health-oriented and environmental perspectives. An open-minded, yet critical, examination of these different approaches may reveal methods which can complement our current medical effort. For instance, ancient insights on the capabilities for human self-regulation, when combined with scientific medicine, may provide techniques which enable individuals to take more active roles in their own health care. There is now an opportunity to broaden the base of medicine to include those elements of ancient medicine that are appropriate to our culture and current health needs. This weekend symposium presents speakers who are part of this emerging trend to establish a more effective and complete system of health care. Faculty DAVID E. BRESLER, Ph.D., is the Director of the Acupuncture Research Project, UCLA School of Medicine, and Assistant Adjunct Professor of Anesthesiology and Psychology at UCLA. His research interests include acupuncture as well as the clinical effectiveness of relaxation therapy, meditation and hypnosis in selected disorders. In addition to his scientific articles on acupuncture and psychosomatic medicine, Dr. Bresler is co-author of the textbook, Acupuncture for Control and Management of Pain. RENE DUBOS, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Environmental Biomedicine at the Rockefeller University. His early research included work on the development of antimicrobial drugs and more recently he has been studying the effects that environmental forces-physicochemical, biological, and social-exert on human life. Dr. Dubois is the author of over twenty books including The Mirage of Health; Man Adapting; Man, Medicine and Environment; So Human an Animal; and Beast or Angel: Choices that Make Us Human. PHILIP R. LEE, M.D., is Director of the Health Policy Program and Professor of Social Medicine, University of California, San Francisco. His is former Assistant Secretary for Health in H.E.W. and former chancellor of the University of California, San Francisco. His research areas include health manpower, prescription drugs, bioethics, and medical education, and his books include the co-authored Pills, Profits and Politics and a forthcoming book on health manpower policy and primary care. DOROTHEA C. LEIGHTON, M.D., is a former Professor and Chairman of the Department of Mental Health, School of Public Health, University of North Carolina. Her background in social psychiatry, public health, medical anthropology, and the ecology of human health includes field work with the Navaho, Zuni, Eskimos and Yoruba of Africa and her publications include the co-authored books The Navaho, and The Character of Danger: Psychiatric Symptoms in Selected Communities. RENALDO J. MADURO, Ph.D., is Research Psychologist, Program in Medical Anthropology, Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco. With a background in psychological anthropology, clinical psychology, and fine arts, he is at present in private practice and in psychoanalytic training at the C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco. His research, teaching and publications include the areas of ethnopsychology, comparative folk psychotherapies, Latino dream analysis, and symbolic healing. ROBERT E. ORNSTEIN, Ph.D., is Associate Professor of Medical Psychology with the Institute for the Study of Human Consciousness at the Langley Porter Neuropsychiatric Institute, the University of California, San Francisco. His research interests include the psychology of meditation, biofeedback of EEG asymmetry, and the conscious functions of the two hemispheres of the brain. Dr. Ornstein is author of The Psychology of Consciousness, editor of The Nature of Human Consciousness, and co-author of On the Psychology of Meditation. DONALD F. SANDNER, M.D., is a training analyst at the C.G. Jung Institute of San Francisco and in private practice of psychiatry. Over the past eight summers he has done field studies with Navaho medicine men and is currently writing a book on symbolic healing. DAVID SHAPIRO, Ph.D., is Professor in the Department of Psychiatry, UCLA School of Medicine and is President-Elect of the Society for Psychophysiological Research. His principal research includes the psychophysiology of stress, biofeedback and hypertension, and he is an editor of the forthcoming Consciousness and Self-Regulation: Advances in Research. DAVID S. SOBEL, Executive Director of the Institute for the Study of Human Knowledge, is a Fellow in the Health Policy Program and a student in medicine at the University of California in San Francisco. He is the editor of the forthcoming book Ways of Health which deals with the subjects and perspectives presented in this symposium. ILZA VEITH, Ph.D., is Professor and Vice-Chairman of the Department of the History of Health Sciences and Professor of the History of Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco. In addition to her numerous publications on the history of medicine and psychiatry, Dr. Veith has written about the history and philosophy of Far Eastern medicine including Medizin in Tibet, Acupuncture Therapy: Current Chinese Practice, and a commentary and translation of the ancient Chinese medical text, The Yellow Emperor's Classic Internal Medicine. The Program Saturday, January 24 Morning 9:00-10:15 HOLISTIC APPROACHES IN ANCIENT AND CONTEMPORARY MEDICINE
10:30-11:30 THE FRONTIERS OF HEALTH CARE
11:30-12:00 MYSTERY AND MAGIC IN MODERN MEDICINE
Afternoon 1:30-2:45 THE ECOLOGICAL VIEW OF HEALTH
3:00-4:00 CURANDERISMO: LATIN AMERICAN FOLK HEALING
4:00-5:30 NAVAHO INDIAN MEDICINE AND MEDICINE MEN
Sunday, January 25 Morning 9:00-9:45 THE TIBETAN ART OF HEALING
9:45-11:00 CHINESE MEDICINE AND ACUPUNCTURE: THEORY, PRACTICE AND RESEARCH
11:15-12:30 MEDITATION AND SELF-REGULATORY THERAPIES
Afternoon 2:00-3:45 BIOFEEDBACK: CLINICAL APPLICATIONS
4:00-5:30 HOMEOSTASIS AND CREATIVE ADAPTATIONS
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