Smoking, Health and Personality

Regular price €179.80
A01=Hans Eysenck
Author_Hans Eysenck
behavioral epidemiology
Broad Street Pump
cancer
Cancer Proneness
cardiovascular disease prediction
Category=JHB
cigarette
Cigarette Smoking Habits
consumption
Coronary
Coronary Thrombosis
Critical Flicker Fusion Thresholds
cyclic
Cyclic Hydrocarbons
enzymatic
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
fermentation
Finger Prints
Fraternal Twins
Gold Berger
H.J. Eysenck
Heaviest Cigarette Smokers
Higher Extraversion Scores
hydrocarbons
Leptosomatic Physique
lung
Lung Cancer
Lung Cancer Patients
Lung Cancer Standardized Mortality Ratios
medical sociology research
Medium Smokers
mortality
Mortality Ratios
Negative Hedonic Tone
Neuroticism Scores
Observed Lung Cancer
Open Field Test
Oscar Wilde
personality traits health outcomes
psychological predictors of disease development
psychosocial risk factors
Psychosomatic Disorders
ratios
statistical methodology health research
USA Figure

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138532632
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Jun 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The Report on Smoking and Health published by the Royal College of Physicians in England in 1965 warned of a connection between lung -cancer and smoking. The findings were widely publicized, and were accepted by practically every-one-indeed, they persist today. As Hans J. Eysenck shows in his classic study Smoking, Health, and Personality, the results were by no means immune to challenge. Not only were the experimental and statistical methods employed vulnerable to criticism, but the results were open to more than one interpretation.In this new edition, Stuart Brody reviews Eysenck's achievement. Eysenck critically reviewed the literature, presented longitudinal studies showing that psychological characteristics are far more potent predictors of heart disease and cancer than smoking behavior, and demonstrated that psychological treatment can halve death rates. Eysenck also spoke the unspeakable, iconoclastically attacking the cherished attribution of millions of deaths to smoking. He examined the interaction of smoking with personality and constitutional factors, and the connection between these factors and the development of cancer. Eysenck saw the cause-and-effect relation between cancer and smoking as oversimplification. He also makes a number of practical suggestions for the kind of social action that could be taken to decrease the incidence of lung cancer. For his part, Brody notes that massive campaigns which exhort people to eschew tobacco or cholesterol have had little or no demonstrable health benefits.This original and stimulating volume is written with great clarity and is easily understood by the layman. It is an incisive account of one of the most important social problems in this country today, and a challenge to orthodoxy in the medical world. As such, this volume offers much for both sides of the anti-smoking lobby, as well as those in the fields of psychology, political science, and sociology. .