About the Book
The definitive resource for the field, Principles and Practice of Stress Management, 2nd Edition, is the only complete stress management reference in which methods are described by the author most closely associated with an established technique.
Table of Contents:
Section I.
Introduction.
1. The Context of Stress Management, Woolfolk & Lehrer.
Section II. Stress Management Methods.
2. Progressive Relaxation: Origins, Principles, and Clinical Applications, McGuigan.
3. Progressive Relaxation: Abbreviated Methods, Bernstein & Carlson.
4. Yoga-Based Therapy, Patel.
5. Modern Forms of Mediation, Carrington.
6. Hypnosuggestive Approaches to Stress Reduction: Data, Theory, and Clinical Applications, Barber.
7. The Autogenic Training Method of J.H. Schultz, Linden.
8. Autogenic Biofeedback in Psychophysiological Therapy and Stress Management, Norris & Fahrion.
9. Biofeedback Methods in the Treatment of Anxiety and Stress Disorders, Stoyva & Budzynski.
10. The Role of Respiration in Stress and Stress Control: Toward a Theory of Stress as a Hypoxic Phenomenon, Fried.
11. Cognitive Approaches to Stress, Beck.
12. Stress Inoculation Training: A 20-Year Update, Meichenbaum.
13. Music Therapy and Stress Management, Maranto.
14. The Use of Aerobic Exercise as a Method of Stress Management, Fillingham & Blumenthal.
15. Pharmacological Approach to the Management of Stress and Anxiety Disorders, Papp & Gorman.
16. Specific Effects of Stress Management Techniques, Lehrer & Woolfolk.
17. Research on Clinical Issues in Stress Management, Lehrer & Woolfolk.
18. Differential Effects of Stress Management Therapies on Emotional and Behavioral Disorders, Lehrer, Carr, Sargunaraj, & Woolfolk.
19. Differential Effects of Stress Management Therapies in Behavioral Medicine, Lehrer, Carr, Sargunaraj, & Woolfolk.
About the Author :
Paul Lehrer received his Ph.D. degree in clinical psychology from Harvard University in 1969, and is currently Professor of Psychiatry at University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. He has published over 50 papers in the relaxation therapies and psychophysiology of stress. He studied progressive muscle relaxation under the tutelage of its originator, Edmund Jacobson, and has a particular interest in examining the specific effects of Jacobson's approach to this technique as compared with other relaxation techniques including modern variants of the progressive relaxation method. An active clinician as well as a researcher, Dr. Lehrer directs the Behavior Therapy and Behavioral Medicine Clinic at Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, and has served on the board of trustees of the Biofeedback Certification Institute of America.
Review :
"Here is a volume packed with detailed clinical and empirical information on everything from relaxation, yoga, meditation, hypnosis, autogenic training, biofeedback, control of respiration, cognitive therapy, and stress
inoculation training to music, aerobic exercise, and pharmacological interventions. Many luminaries have contributed individual chapters including Barber, Beck, Meichenbaum, Patel, Stoyva, and Budzynski, and the final section on integration, written by Lehrer, Woolfolk and their colleagues, brings this impressive tome together in a most compelling fashion." --Arnold A. Lazarus, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor, Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology, Rutgers University "The editors, Paul Lehrer and Robert Woolfolk, have fulfilled their promise of providing the practitioner with everything one could possibly want to know about the concepts, methods, and applications of stress reduction and stress management. The contributors to the volume are all highly respected masters of the field. Each chapter lays out in complete detail the historical background of the method, the philosophical and theoretical force behind it, how to do it, why it works, and for whom it may be appropriate. Although research on stress management is not a primary focus of the volume, the researcher will not be disappointed. The editors themselves conclude the volume with three truly comprehensive reviews of the major research questions in the field. These reviews, as well as the other chapters, are full of new ideas about how to look at the various areas of application in mental and physical health and where these fields are going and in each case backed up by hundreds of citations of relevant literature. After thirty years of working on issues in this field, I was surprised and intrigued by the many new ways of thinking about the meaning and consequences of stress for people and how the methods discussed can be effectively applied. I can't think of anyone in the field who will not want to have this volume nearby, whether seasoned investigator, student, or practitioner." --David Shapiro, Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles
"A virtually encyclopedic manual for the empirically oriented clinician interested in learning about the full range of techniques and approaches subsumed under the rubric of stress management. The editors, themselves exemplars of the scientist-practitioner model, have put together a distinguished group of experienced research-oriented clinicians who provide otherwise unavailable details on how to analyze stress-related problems and to implement a variety of stress management procedures in a humane and effective fashion. In an interesting way, this volume can be salutary for the professional whom Lehrer and Woolfolk rightfully describe as suffering from stress due to the increasing difficulty of keeping up with new developments--for the book provides a comprehensive overview of a complex and burgeoning field. This is a must read for applied workers who want to stay abreast of current work as well as obtain some glimpses of future developments in stress management." --Gerald C. Davison, Ph.D., University of Southern California Department of Psychology
.,."beginner and experienced stress-management practitioners and useful addition to their library, not only for the subject matter but also for the excellent references contained in each chapter." -- "British Journal of Guidance and Counseling"
"This book has been skillfully edited by Drs. Lehrer and Woolfolk in such a manner as to provide the busy hypnotherapist clinician with a detailed reference manual that will assist in determining alternative approaches to stress management." -- "American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis"
"The editors have done a masterful job in reviewing these and also in updating topics previously covered...The authors of each of these chapters have all been carefully selected, and in most instances are the preeminent authorities in their specific areas of expertise....This book should be of inestimable value for anyone interested in any aspect of stress management. As the Foreword notes, 'Biofeedback Is Not Relaxation Is Not Hypnosis, ' and that message is clearly delivered." -- "The Newsletter of the American Institute of Stress"
"This book provides a thorough, well-presented discussion of the breadth and depth of the field....A significant contribution to the literature that provides a comprehensive review of research in stress management principles and application. It is an important work for everyone in the field of behavioral medicine and it is a useful reference for documenting the efficacy of stress management techniques." -- "Doody's Annual Health Sciences Book Review "
, .."beginner and experienced stress-management practitioners and useful addition to their library, not only for the subject matter but also for the excellent references contained in each chapter." -- British Journal of Guidance and Counseling
"This book has been skillfully edited by Drs. Lehrer and Woolfolk in such a manner as to provide the busy hypnotherapist clinician with a detailed reference manual that will assist in determining alternative approaches to stress management." -- American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis
"The editors have done a masterful job in reviewing these and also in updating topics previously covered...The authors of each of these chapters have all been carefully selected, and in most instances are the preeminent authorities in their specific areas of expertise....This book should be of inestimable value for anyone interested in any aspect of stress management. As the Foreword notes, 'Biofeedback Is Not Relaxation Is Not Hypnosis, ' and that message is clearly delivered." -- The Newsletter of the American Institute of Stress
"This book provides a thorough, well-presented discussion of the breadth and depth of the field....A significant contribution to the literature that provides a comprehensive review of research in stress management principles and application. It is an important work for everyone in the field of behavioral medicine and it is a useful reference for documenting the efficacy of stress management techniques." -- Doody's Annual Health Sciences Book Review
..."beginner and experienced stress-management practitioners and useful addition to their library, not only for the subject matter but also for the excellent references contained in each chapter." --"British Journal of Guidance and Counseling"
"This book has been skillfully edited by Drs. Lehrer and Woolfolk in such a manner as to provide the busy hypnotherapist clinician with a detailed reference manual that will assist in determining alternative approaches to stress management." --"American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis"
"The editors have done a masterful job in reviewing these and also in updating topics previously covered...The authors of each of these chapters have all been carefully selected, and in most instances are the preeminent authorities in their specific areas of expertise....This book should be of inestimable value for anyone interested in any aspect of stress management. As the Foreword notes, 'Biofeedback Is Not Relaxation Is Not Hypnosis, ' and that message is clearly delivered." --"The Newsletter of the American Institute of Stress"
"This book provides a thorough, well-presented discussion of the breadth and depth of the field....A significant contribution to the literature that provides a comprehensive review of research in stress management principles and application. It is an important work for everyone in the field of behavioral medicine and it is a useful reference for documenting the efficacy of stress management techniques." --"Doody's Annual Health Sciences Book Review "