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| Healing Brain Seminar: October 1981
THE HEALING BRAIN III WHO STAYS HEALTHY? A Weekend Symposium
Sponsored by
Medicine and medical care have understandably been focused on those who become ill. Considerable evidence has accumulated showing that particular environmental, behavioral and biological factors increase the risk of disease and disability. However, not all people exposed to these risk factors become ill. In fact, the overwhelming majority remain healthy. What can we learn from examining those people with high resistance to disease? Why are some people able to withstand considerable life stress and yet remain healthy? A new view of human health and disease is emerging-one which acknowledges the remarkable sensitivity, resiliency and recuperative powers of the human organism. This inter-disciplinary symposium will bring together leading researchers and clinicians to explore the critical role of personality, coping, social support, exercise and nutrition in determining who stays healthy. FACULTY Jonathan E. Fielding, M.D., M.P.H., is Co-director of the Center for Health Enhancement Education and Research and is Professor of Pediatrics and Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles. He is also the former Commissioner of Public Health for Massachusetts. He is actively involved in research and program development in the areas of community and industrial health promotion and computer-assisted health risk appraisal. William L. Haskell, Ph.D., is a Clinical Associate Professor of Medicine and Family, Community and Preventive Medicine at Stanford University. His major research interests are the health benefits of exercise and factors limiting human physical performance. Recent research has focused on exercise in heart disease prevention and cardiac rehabilitation. He is author of numerous articles on exercise, performance and health. Suzanne C. Kobasa, Ph.D., is Assistant Professor, Committee on Social and Organizational Psychology, Department of Behavioral Sciences, University of Chicago. Her major research has been in the area of resistance to stress including ongoing studies of executives, lawyers, army officers and women at risk for cervical cancer. Richard S. Lazarus, Ph.D., is Professor of Psychology at the University of California, Berkeley. His research interests have principally focused on cognitive processes that mediate stress and coping with stress and illness. He has authored numerous research and theoretical papers as well as several books including Psychological Stress and the Coping Process and Patterns of Adjustment. Marion Nestle, Ph.D., is Associate Dean, University of California San Francisco and Lecturer in the Departments of Medicine and Biochemistry. She directs the UCSF Nutrition Curriculum Development Project and teaches nutrition to medical and other health professions students and practitioners. Ray H. Rosenman, M.D., is Senior Research Physician, SRI International and Associate Chief of Medicine at Mount Zion Hospital and Medical Center. As a cardiologist he has extensively investigated the role of risk factors including behavior in the development of coronary heart disease and hypertension. He has authored numerous scientific papers and co-authored a popular book Type A Behavior and Your Heart. David S. Sobel, M.D., M.P.H., is Chief of Preventive Medicine, Kaiser-Permanente Medical Center at Santa Teresa and Medical Director of the Institute for the Study of Human Knowledge. His current areas of interest include medical self-care, behavioral medicine and health promotion. He is editor of a book Ways of Health and serves as a symposium chairperson. S. Leonard Syme, Ph.D., is Professor of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley. A medical sociologist by training, his major research has been in the area of sociocultural determinants of noninfectious diseases. SYMPOSIUM CHAIRPERSONS
PROGRAM SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17 MORNING PEOPLE NEED PEOPLE: SOCIAL SUPPORT AND HEALTH
LIVING WITH TYPE A BEHAVIOR
PANEL AFTERNOON STRESS-RESISTANT PERSONALITY
THE EFFECT OF DAILY HASSLES AND UPLIFTS ON HEALTH
PANEL SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18 MORNING HOW MUCH EXERCISE DO YOU NEED?
EAT, DRINK AND BE HEALTHY
PANEL AFTERNOON HEALTH RISK ASSESSMENT
WHO STAYS HEALTHY?: A SUMMARY
PANEL
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