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'A fantastic contribution to health psychology. My PhD students and
medical students are instructed to read it (not often I recommend
books these days). It feels like the field has been waiting for
this for a long time' - Dr Lis Cordingley Senior Lecturer in Health
Psychology, School of Medicine, University of Manchester An
engaging introduction to the interrelationships between mind and
body across a broad range of topics including infectious illness,
autoimmunity, cancer and pain. Taking a biopsychosocial approach,
it brings together research from a number of disciplines including
health psychology, psychoneuroimmunology and behavioural genetics.
Students are encouraged to consider how advances in
psychobiological research can help us to uncover the true
complexity of links between psychological, biological and social
processes with respect to implications for health and how such
advances can inform the development of interventions and treatment.
'A fantastic contribution to health psychology. My PhD students and
medical students are instructed to read it (not often I recommend
books these days). It feels like the field has been waiting for
this for a long time' - Dr Lis Cordingley Senior Lecturer in Health
Psychology, School of Medicine, University of Manchester An
engaging introduction to the interrelationships between mind and
body across a broad range of topics including infectious illness,
autoimmunity, cancer and pain. Taking a biopsychosocial approach,
it brings together research from a number of disciplines including
health psychology, psychoneuroimmunology and behavioural genetics.
Students are encouraged to consider how advances in
psychobiological research can help us to uncover the true
complexity of links between psychological, biological and social
processes with respect to implications for health and how such
advances can inform the development of interventions and treatment.
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