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" Cancer, Stress, and Death "
edited by Stacey B. Day.
Document Type
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BL
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Record Number
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734406
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Doc. No
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b554237
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Main Entry
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edited by Stacey B. Day.
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Title & Author
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Cancer, Stress, and Death\ edited by Stacey B. Day.
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Edition Statement
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Second edition
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Publication Statement
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Boston, MA: Springer US : Imprint : Springer, 1986
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ISBN
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1475795734
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: 1475795750
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: 9781475795738
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: 9781475795752
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Contents
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Introduction: Stress as a Cause of Disease --;1. Stress, Cancer, and the Mind --;2. Stress, Hormone Responses, and Cancer --;3. Stress, the Immune System, and Cancer --;4. Psychological Factors in the Causation and Course of Cancer --;5. Recent Biopsychosociological Approaches to Cancer Study in Japan --;6. The Homeostatic Significance of the Death-Life Cycle Dynamics in Mental Functions --;7. The Patient as a Communicator --;8. The Cancer Patient as Educator and Counselor --;9. Stress, Cancer: Stress Modulation of the Metastatic Process --;10. Hospice Care in North America --;11. Advanced Malignant Disease, Pain, Physical Deterioration, and Death --;12. To Live Cancer with Love --;13. Anticipatory Grief, Stress, and the Surrogate Griever --;14. Self-Help and Hubris in Cancer Care --;15. Stress, Cancer, Death --;A Pediatric Perspective --;16. Models of Group Intervention for Cancer Patients and Families --;17. Telling the Truth to the Dying Patient --;18. The Pastoral Physician: Cancer and Psychospiritual Care --;19. Progress in Biopsychosocial Approaches to Cancer in Northern Europe (Finland) --;20. Early Family Attitudes and the Stress Process --;A Life-Span and Personological Model of Host-Tumor Relationships: Biopsychosocial Research on Cancer and Stress in Central Europe --;21. The Biopsychosocial Way as a Clinical Mode for Handling Critical Disease Problems in Tropical West Africa --;22. Some Thoughts on the Endemiology of Cancer --;23. The Introduction of Occidental and Oriental Approaches in Biopsychosocial Medicine --;24. Discussion --;25. Death Not the Mysterium Tremendum: A Summary Overview.
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Abstract
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Such syntheses as we have made clearly confirm that one can arrive at several levels of understanding of human situations through wise integration of biological paradigms within various social, cultural, and psychological parameters-which essentially is a simple way of defining the biopsychosocial way.
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Subject
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Medicine.
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Subject
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Oncology.
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Subject
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Public health.
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Added Entry
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Stacey B Day
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