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| Healing Brain Seminar: December 1984
THE HEALING BRAIN A Continuing Education Symposium
ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY
Co-sponsored by THE INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
Questions concerning the relationship of mind to matter deserve careful attention when personal health is at stake. The physical distress we feel in situations of social conflict and disunity - how do these effects contribute to health and disease? What about the sense of physical well-being we feel in conditions of social harmony? Can the brain actually heal the body? Recent advances in brain research and the behavioral sciences have revealed that interpersonal interactions can influence physiological responses and modify disease susceptibility. We are also learning more about how sensitive the brain is to environmental changes, how stress alters our immune system, and how to mobilize the brain's intrinsic healing potential. These and other findings of major clinical importance will be explored at a one-day symposium. A distinguished faculty of researchers and clinicians will provide through lectures, panel discussions, and questions and answers an up-to-date review of emerging trends in behavioral medicine. PROGRAM MORNING SESSION THE BRAIN AS A HEALTH MAINTENANCE ORGANIZATION
PSYCHONEUROIMMUNOLOGY: THE BRAIN'S INFLUENCE ON IMMUNITY
WHO STAYS HEALTHY UNDER STRESS?
AFTERNOON SESSION STRESS, HEART DISEASE AND THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM
THE PLACEBO EFFECT: USING THE BODY'S OWN HEALING MECHANISMS
ENDORPHINS, PAIN AND PLACEBOS
LEFT BRAIN, RIGHT BRAIN: HEALTH AND CONSCIOUSNESS
FACULTY ROBERT S. ELIOT, M.D., is Director of the National Center of Preventive and Stress Medicine, St. Luke's Hospital in Phoenix and Clinical Professor of Cardiology, University of Nebraska Medical Center. He has investigated and published widely in the area of stress and its effects on the cardiovascular system about which he has recently written a practical book for the public entitled, Is It Worth Dying For? JON D. LEVINE, M.D., Ph.D., is Assistant Professor of Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. He is a neurophysiologist and rheumatologist with research interests in mechanisms of pain control and the role of the nervous system in rheumatoid arthritis. ROBERT E. ORNSTEIN, Ph.D., is Visiting Professor of Human Biology at Stanford University and President of The Institute for the Study of Human Knowledge. His research interests include the function of the two hemispheres of the brain, perception and communication in the human sciences. He is author of The Psychology of Consciousness and The Mind Field and co-author of On the Psychology of Meditation. DAVID S. SOBEL, M.D., M.P.H., is Chief of Preventive Medicine, Kaiser-Permanente Medical Center in San Jose and Medical Program Director of The Institute for the Study of Human Knowledge. His current areas of interest include behavioral medicine, health promotion and public health education. He is editor of Ways of Health: Holistic Approaches to Ancient and Contemporary Medicine.
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