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| Healing Brain Seminar: March 1987
THE HEALING BRAIN IV A Continuing Education Symposium
San Jose Presented by
The brain minds the body-and states of health and disease are profoundly influenced by states of mind. This conference will present some of the recent advances in the brain and behavioral sciences which shed light on the vital role of the brain as a health maintenance organization. Can suggestions given before and during surgery influence postoperative healing and recovery? Can hospital environments be redesigned to foster better emotional states and communication for patients, families and staff? Can conventional cancer treatments be complemented by unconventional therapies to better address the needs of the whole person? Can excessive self-involvement and self-centeredness put people at risk for heart disease? Can a feeling of capability reduce pain and disability from arthritis? These and other questions of major clinical importance will be explored in a one-day symposium by a distinguished faculty of researchers, teachers and clinicians. They will provide an up-to-date review of some of the emerging trends in behavioral medicine. FACULTY HENRY L. BENNETT, Ph.D. is Assistant Adjunct Professor, Department of Anesthesiology, University of California Davis, School of Medicine. For the past five years he has studied the experience of patients before, during and after surgery. HALSTED R. HOLMAN, M.D. is Professor of Medicine and Director of the Stanford Arthritis Center, Stanford University School of Medicine and the past president of the Midpeninsula Health Service. His research interests have ranged from immunology to health care delivery in communities. MICHAEL LERNER, Ph.D. is President of Commonweal Health Center in Marin County and a MacArthur Prize Fellow at the Institute for Health Policy Studies at the University of California San Francisco School of Medicine. He has devoted much of the past five years to investigating complementary cancer therapies and is founder of Commonweal Cancer Help Program, a residential group support and education program for motivated cancer patients. ROSLYN LINDHEIM is Professor of Architecture at the University of California in Berkeley. She has had extensive experience in hospital design and is chairman and architect for the Planetree Model Hospital Project, a highly innovative medical-surgical unit at Pacific Presbyterian Medical Center in San Francisco. ROBERT 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 several books including The Amazing Brain, The Psychology of Consciousness, Psychology: The Study of Human Experience, and the forthcoming book The Healing Brain. LARRY SCHERWITZ, Ph.D. is Assistant Professor of Social Psychology, Department of Dental Public Health and Hygiene, University of California San Francisco School of Dentistry and Director, Research Psychology, Preventive Medicine Research Institute in San Francisco. His primary research interests have been in investigating psychosocial risk factors and alternative methods for treating coronary heart disease. Course Coordinator
LECTURES The Healing Brain: An Introduction
The Hospital: Creating a Healing Environment
Preparing for Surgery: The Use of Physiologically Active Suggestions
The Brain Minds the Body
Psychological Determinants of Outcome in Chronic Arthritis
Varieties of Integral Cancer Therapies
Self-Involvement and Coronary Heart Disease Risk
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