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Jacobsen, Paul B.; Andrykowski, Michael A.; Thors, Christina L. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2004
This study examined the relationship of catastrophizing to fatigue in 80 women receiving chemotherapy (CT) or radiotherapy (RT) for treatment of early stage breast cancer. Findings revealed expected relationships between catastrophizing and fatigue among women receiving RT but not CT. Among RT patients, those high in catastrophizing reported…
Descriptors: Fatigue (Biology), Patients, Females, Cancer
Nakao, Mutsuhiro; Kashiwagi, Masayo; Yano, Eiji – Death Studies, 2005
To examine the relationship between grief reactions and alexithymia, 54 Japanese women (33 outpatients attending a psychosomatic clinic and 21 normal healthy participants) completed the Texas Inventory of Grief (TIG), the 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20), and the Profile of Mood States (POMS). Each woman had experienced the death of a…
Descriptors: Females, Depression (Psychology), Grief, Foreign Countries
Sloan, Denise M.; Marx, Brian P. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2004
The current study examined psychological and physical health outcomes of the written disclosure paradigm and the hypothesis that the principles of therapeutic exposure account for the beneficial effects of the paradigm. Participants were randomly assigned to either a written disclosure condition or a control condition. Reactivity to the writing…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Physical Health, Well Being, Emotional Response
Etherington, Kim – British Journal of Guidance and Counselling, 2005
This paper is based on a study of how childhood trauma can be experienced in the body and the resources individuals have chosen to deal with that. Ten individuals (including myself) wrote stories showing how they had made sense of those experiences and found ways to heal. In this paper, I tell the story of that research, contextualising myself as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Abuse, Psychosomatic Disorders, Psychophysiology

Franzen, Michael D.; Heffernan, William – 1983
Both behavioral and cognitive coping strategies are determined by an individual's perception of the stressful stimuli. To investigate the relationship of an individual's usual coping style to differential responses to a behavioral or cognitive stressor in four response systems (heart rate, muscle tension, galvanic skin response, and subjective…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Behavior Patterns, Cognitive Style, College Students
Edelman, Barbara – 1980
The psychosomatic theory of obesity assumes that binging, eating in response to emotional distress, is characteristic of obese individuals, yet experimental attempts to demonstrate binging have yielded weak support for this assumption. The incidence of binging was investigated by means of structured interviews on food habits with 41 male and 39…
Descriptors: Adults, Behavioral Science Research, Body Weight, Eating Habits
Blount, Ronald L.; Morris, Julie A. B.; Cheng, Patricia S.; Campbell, Robert M.; Brown, Ronald T. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2004
The authors examined associations among parental and child adjustment, child syncope, somatic, and school problems. Participants were children (N = 56) ages 7-18 years with syncope. Measures included syncope severity, parental distress, and children's internalizing symptoms. For children diagnosed negative for neurocardiogenic syncope (NCS), their…
Descriptors: Psychosomatic Disorders, Human Body, Mothers, Fathers
Feinson, Marjorie Chary – 1983
Though many theories of the greater impact of a spouse's death on men than on women derive some support from role theory, little empirical data exist to support the hypotheses. Behavioral studies of widowhood have focused on social participation as a determinant in coping, without studying the survivor's degree of social involvement before the…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Aging (Individuals), Anxiety, Death