Social Stress

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A01=Sol Levine
Alan Howard
Andrew Crider
Author_Sol Levine
Autonomic Nervous System Arousal
Barbara Snell Dohrenwend
behavioral epidemiology
broken
Broken Home
Bruce P. Dohrenwend
Category=JHBL
Category=JMAL
Category=JMH
class
Coping Processes
Cornell Medical Index
cycle
Delinquency
Discomforting Responses
E. Gartly Jaco
Edward Gross
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Experienced Jumpers
family systems theory
Family's Life Cycle
familys
Family’s Life Cycle
home
hypertensive
Hypertensive Heart Disease
James E. Teele
John Cassel
Levine Sol
life
Lower Class Members
Lower Class Negro
Lower Class Negroes
Lower Class Persons
Lower Class Whites
Mediating Factors
Mental Illness
Middle Class Negro
Middle Class Negroes
negroes
Norman A. Scotch
Novice Parachutists
persons
Physiological Arousal
Potentially Stressful Situations
President's National Advisory Commission
President’s National Advisory Commission
psychological adaptation
Psychosomatic Disorders
Psychosomatic Model
Richard S. Lazarus
Robert Scott
Scotch Norman A.
sociology of health
Sol Levine
status anxiety
stress response mechanisms in social contexts
Sydney H. Croog
workplace mental health
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781412851831
  • Weight: 408g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Aug 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Physicians are not alone in their concern with stress. Other professionals, such as psychologists and social workers, invoke stress to explain social pathology, for example, alcoholism, suicide, and drug abuse. They are joined by additional individuals in implicating stress in the development of disease. Indeed, conventional wisdom has long noted that to worry, be tense, or take things hard, is to increase one's vulnerability to disease.

Sol Levine and Norman A. Scotch argue that whether the focus upon stress is in its origins and its management, or upon its relationship to individual pathology and behavior, it is necessary to appreciate its complexity and its various dimensions. In particular, they discuss and answer the following common questions: To what extent do various work and organizational settings engender stress for various occupants? To what degree does upward and downward social mobility create stress? What are the effects of family disruptions—death, divorce, or desertion—upon the psychological state of the individual?

This book presents a clear and comprehensive picture of the phenomena encompassed within the conceptual rubric of stress and to explicate such specific levels or dimensions as the sources of stress, its management, and its consequences. The contributors are top researchers from the fields of sociology, anthropology, psychology, and medicine. They include Sydney H. Croog, Edward Gross, Barbara Snell Dohrenwend, Bruce P. Dohrenwend, Richard S. Lazarus, Andrew Crider, John Cassell, E. Gartly Jaco, James E. Teele, Robert Scott, and Alan Howard. The work concludes with a statement by the editors summarizing the data and themes that are presented throughout the work. This work should be read by all individuals. In particular, it will be invaluable for sociologists, psychologists, and professional social scientists.

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