|
|
| Healing Brain Seminar: December 1981
THE HEALING BRAIN III A Weekend Symposium
Sponsored by
We have radically underestimated our sensitivity to the social and physical environment as well as human capabilities for self-healing. Recent advances in the brain and behavioral sciences have revealed that interpersonal interactions can markedly influence physiological responses and that social support and friends may modify disease susceptibility. We are also learning more about the lasting effects of nutrition on brain development and how hypnosis and biofeedback may be used to mobilize the healing potential of the brain. These and other findings of major clinical importance will be explored at a two-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. FACULTY Marian C. Diamond, M.A., Ph.D., is professor of anatomy at the University of California, Berkeley and former associate dean of the College of Letters and Science. Her research has centered on how the structure of the nervous system can be modified by changes in the environment. She is also currently developing a school health education program to enhance body awareness in children. Rene Dubos, Ph.D., is professor emeritus of environmental biomedicine at the Rockefeller University. His early research involved the development of anti-microbial drugs and more recently he has been investigating the effects that environmental forces-- physiochemical, biological, and social -- exert on human life. Dr. Dubos is author of over twenty books including The Wooing of Earth, The Mirage of Health, and Man Adapting. Jeffrey H. Goldstein, Ph.D., is professor of psychology at Temple University. His major research has been in the areas of humor and laughter as well as human aggression. He is co-editor of the book The Psychology of Humor and is currently editing The Handbook of Humor Research. 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. Jon D. Levine, M.D., Ph.D., is acting chief of the Pain Research Laboratory and a fellow in the Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco. His research has been on the mechanisms of pain and analgesia in animals and the role of endorphins in placebo analgesia. Steven E. Locke, M.D., is acting director, Consultation Liaison Service in Psychiatry, Beth Israel Hospital in Boston and instructor in psychiatry, Harvard Medical School. His major research interests have been in brain and behavioral influences on immune function in humans. Meredith Minkler, Dr.P.H., is assistant professor of Health Education, School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley. Her research interests include the problems of aging in American society, the health affects of retirement, and the role of supportive ties in health maintenance. Ethel Roskies, Ph.D., is professor in the Department of Psychology, and head of the Laboratory of Health Psychology at the University of Montreal. Her research interests have centered on the health benefits of altering lifestyle, specifically Type A behavior in business and professional people. 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. PROGRAM SATURDAY, DECEMBER 12 MORNING PSYCHOSOCIAL FACTORS
SELF-HEALING: A PERSONAL HISTORY
ENVIRONMENT, AIR IONS, AND BRAIN CHEMISTRY
PANEL DISCUSSION AFTERNOON BRAIN, BEHAVIOR, AND IMMUNITY
PAIN, PLACEBOS, AND ENDORPHINS: USING THE BODY'S OWN HEALING MECHANISMS
PANEL DISCUSSION SUNDAY, DECEMBER 13 MORNING COPING WITH STRESS TO STAY HEALTHY
STRESS-RESISTANT PERSONALITY
PANEL DISCUSSION AFTERNOON PEOPLE NEED PEOPLE: SOCIAL SUPPORT AND HEALTH
THE THERAPEUTIC BENEFITS OF LAUGHTER
PANEL DISCUSSION
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||