When the Body Says No: The Cost of Hidden Stress (45 page)

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Authors: Gabor Maté

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2.
D. A. Snowdon
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3.
Victoria Glendinning,
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4.
David Shenk,
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5.
D. A. Snowdon, “Aging and Alzheimer’s Disease: Lessons from the Nun Study,”
Gerontologist
38, no. 1 (February 1998), 5–6.

6.
V.A. Evseev
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7.
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21, no. 2 (May 1994), 112–19.

8.
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9.
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10.
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11.
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12.
Michael Korda,
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13: Self or Non-Self: The Immune System Confused

1.
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77 (15 August 1957), 344–45.

2.
B. R. Shochet
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3.
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4.
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, (9 September 1967), 488–93.

5.
John Bowlby,
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(New York: Basic Books, 1980), 69.

6.
Bowlby,
Attachment
, 68.

7.
Michael Hagmann, “A New Way to Keep Immune Cells in Check,”
Science
, 1945.

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14.
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et al.
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1 (November 1959).

16.
Hoffman, “Examination of Changes in Interpersonal Stress …”

14: A Fine Balance: The Biology of Relationships

1.
Hofer, “Relationships as Regulators.”

2.
Buck, “Emotional Communication, Emotional Competence, and Physical Illness,” 42.

3.
Seeman and McEwen, “Impact of Social Environment Characteristics …”

4.
E. Pennisi, “Neuroimmunology: Tracing Molecules That Make the Brain-Body Connection,”
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5.
G. Affleck
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62, 62–68.

6.
D. A. Mrazek, “Childhood Asthma: The Interplay of Psychiatric and Physiological Factors,”
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7.
Ibid., 21.

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, 188–89.

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Cancer
91, no. 4 (15 February 2001), 686–97.

11.
P. Reynolds and G. A. Kaplan, “Social Connections and Risk for Cancer: Prospective Evidence from the Alameda County Study,”
Behavioral Medicine
, (Fall 1990), 101–10.

12.
For a full discussion of differentiation, see Michael E. Kerr and Murray Bowen,
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(New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1988), chapter 4, 89–111.

13.
S. E. Locke, “Stress, Adaptation, and Immunity: Studies in Humans,”
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4 (1982), 49–58.

14.
J. K. Kiecolt-Glaser
et
al., “Marital Quality, Marital Disruption, and Immune Function,”
Psychosomatic Medicine
49, no. 1 (January–February 1987).

15.
Kerr and Bowen,
Family Evaluation
, 182.

16.
Seeman and McEwen, “Impact of Social Environment Characteristics …,” 459.

15: The Biology of Loss

1.
L. Grassi and S. Molinari, “Early Family Attitudes and Neoplastic Disease,” Abstracts of the Fifth Symposium on Stress and Cancer, Kiev, 1984; cited in H. J. Baltrusch and M. E. Waltz, “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,” in Stacey B. Day, ed.,
Cancer, Stress and Death
(New York: Plenum Medical Book Company, 1986), 275.

2.
Ibid., 277.

3.
L. G. Russek
et al.
,“Perceptions of Parental Caring Predict Health Status in Midlife: A 35-Year Follow-up of the Harvard Mastery Stress Study,”
Psychosomatic Medicine
59 (1997), 144–49.

4.
M. A. Hofer, “On the Nature and Consequences of Early Loss,”
Psychosomatic Medicine
58 (1996), 570–80.

5.
“Kisses and Chemistry Linked in Rats,”
The Globe and Mail
(Toronto) 17 September 1997.

6.
Hofer, “On the Nature and Consequences of Early Loss.”

7.
S. Levine and H. Ursin, “What is Stress?” in S. Levine and H. Ursin, eds.,
Psychobiology of Stress
, (New York: Academic Press, 1972), 17.

8.
Allan Schore,
Affect Regulation and the Origin of the Self: The Neurobiology of Emotional Development
(Mahwah: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1994), 378.

16: The Dance of Generations

1.
M. Marmot and E. Brunner, “Epidemiological Applications of Long-Term Stress in Daily Life,” in T. Theorell, ed.,
Everyday Biological Stress Mechanisms
, vol. 22 (Basel: Karger, 2001), 89–90.

2.
C. Caldji
et al.
, “Maternal Care During Infancy Regulates the Development of Neural Systems Mediating the Expression of Fearfulness in the Rat,”
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95, no. 9 (28 April 1998), 5335–40.

3.
C. Caldji
et al.
,“Variations in Maternal Care in Infancy Regulate the Development of Stress Reactivity,”
Biological Psychiatry
48, no. 12, 1164–74.

4.
L. Miller
et al.
, “Intergenerational Transmission of Parental Bonding among Women,”
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
36 (1997), 1134–39.

5.
R. Yehuda
et al.
, “Cortisol Levels in Adult Offspring of Holocaust Survivors: Relation to PTSD Symptom Severity in the Parent and Child,”
Psychoneuroendocrinology
27, no. 1–2 (2001), 171–80.

6.
D. J. Siegel,
The Developing Mind: Toward a Neurobiology of Interpersonal Experience
(New York: The Guilford Press, 1999), 73.

7.
Selye,
The Stress of Life
, 81.

8.
Kerr and Bowen,
Family Evaluation
, 259.

9.
Caldji, “Variations In Maternal Care in Infancy …”

10.
M. Kerr, “Cancer and the Family Emotional System,” in J. G. Goldberg, ed.,
Psychotherapeutic Treatment of Cancer Patients
(New York: The Free Press, 1981), 297.

11.
Selye,
The Stress of Life
, 391.

12.
D. Raphael,
Social Justice Is Good for Our Hearts: Why Societal Factors—Not Lifestyles—Are Major Causes of Heart Disease in Canada and Elsewhere
(Toronto: CSJ Foundation for Research and Education, 2002), xi; report available at
http://www.socialjustice.org
.

13.
M. G. Marmot
et al.
, “Inequalities in Death—Specific Explanations of a General Pattern,”
Lancet
3 (1984), 1003–6, cited in M. Marmot and E. Brunner, “Epidemiological Applications of Long-Term Stress in Daily Life,” in T. Theorell, ed.,
Everyday Biological Stress Mechanisms
, 83.

17: The Biology of Belief

1.
B. H. Lipton, “Nature, Nurture and Human Development,”
Journal of Prenatal and Perinatal Psychology and Health
16, no. 2 (2001), 167–80.

18: The Power of Negative Thinking

1.
Kerr and Bowen,
Family Evaluation
, 279.

2.
Mogens R. Jensen, “Psychobiological Factors Predicting the Course of Breast Cancer,”
Journal of Personality
55, no. 2 (June 1987), 337.

3.
Levy,
Behavior and Cancer
, 165.

4.
S. Warren
et al.
, “Emotional Stress and the Development of Multiple Sclerosis: Case-Control Evidence of a Relationship,”
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35 (1982), 821–31.

5.
Ford,
A Glad Awakening
.

6.
Candace B. Pert,
Molecules of Emotion
, 193.

19: The Seven A’s of Healing

1.
A. J. Bdurtha
et al.
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37 (1976), 735–42.

2.
Rogentine
et al.
, cited in B. Fox and B. Newberry, eds.,
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3.
Ibid., 267.

4.
F. I. Fawzy
et al.
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Archives of General Psychiatry
50 (1993), 681–89; cited in Michael Lerner,
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(Cambridge, Mass.: The MIT Press, 1994), 159.

5.
F. I. Fawzy
et al.
, “A Structured Psychiatric Intervention for Cancer Patients: Changes over Time in Immunologic Measures,”
Archives of General Psychiatry
47 (1990), 729–35.

6.
Oliver Sacks,
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7.
A. F. Siegman
et al.
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Psychosomatic Medicine
62 (2000), 248–57.

8.
L. R. Ormont, “Aggression and Cancer in Group Treatment” in Jane G. Goldberg, ed.,
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(New York: The Free Press, 1981), 226.

9.
V. J. Felitti
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14, no. 4 (1998), 245–58.

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