This book presents a new approach to physical and mental health based on cognitive orientation (CO) theoryan approach that enables understanding, predicting and changing behaviors in different domains. The major tenet of the CO approach is that cognitive beliefs and themespecific for the behavior or disorderfunction as a motivational disposition for that behavior, thus enabling the prediction of its occurrence and a targeted intervention. This monograph presents the theory and methodology of CO with empirical examples in regard to healthaffiliated behaviors (e.g., undergoing medical tests, taking medications), mental disorders (e.g. schizophrenia, depression, addiction, ADHD), physical disorders (e.g., cancer diseases, cardiological disorders, skin disorders), coping behaviors (e.g., resilience, post-traumatic growth), and interventions designed to reduce chances of disease recurrence and enhance quality of life. The objective of the book is to describe the contribution of the CO approach to health and to explore the similarities and differences between the characteristic features of mental and physical disorders. It provides a firm innovative psychological basis for understanding mental and physical disorders and providing adequate psychological help for patients suffering from these disorders--ranging from children to adults to cognitively-challenged individuals. This book will be relevant for psychologists, psychology students, psychotherapists, health psychologists, clinical psychologists, medical doctors, psychiatrists, oncologists, and other medical and health professionals.
Chapter
1. Introduction to Cognitive Orientation: Antecedents and
Precedents.
Chapter
2. Cognitive orientation: Outlines of the model.-
Chapter
3. Predicting behavior.
Chapter
4. Health related behaviors.-
Chapter
5. Psychological Factors in the Arena of the Etiology of Diseases.-
Chapter
6. The Psycho-Physical Interaction Model of Health and Disease.-
Chapter
7. Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.
Chapter
8. Eating
disorders: Anorexia, bulimia, obesity.
Chapter
9. Hypochondriasis, somatic
symptom disorder and bodily dysmorphic disorder.
Chapter
10. Obsessive
compulsive disorder.
Chapter
11. Conduct disorder and Psychopathy.
Chapter
12. Depression and anxiety disorders.
Chapter
13. Schizophrenia.
Chapter
14. Paranoia.
Chapter
15. Asthma .
Chapter
16. Skin disorders.
Chapter
17.
Diabetes.
Chapter
18. Gastrointestinal disorders.
Chapter
19. Coronary
heart disease.
Chapter
20. Pain disorders: Migraine and fibromyalgia.-
Chapter
21. Gynecological disorders and sexual dysfunctions.
Chapter
22.
Pregnancy, Child Bearing and Delivery.
Chapter
23. Lupus and multiple
sclerosis.
Chapter
24. Parkinsons disease and epilepsy in adults and
children.
Chapter
25. Osteoarthritis, Rheumatoid Arthritis and Osteoporosis
.
Chapter
26. Cancer Diseases (shared by both genders).
Chapter
27.
Sex-specific cancer diseases.
Chapter
28. Survival in Cancer.
Chapter
29.
On the Way to Health: Obstacles, Supports and Guidelines for the Therapeutic
CO Intervention .
Shulamith Kreitler is a full Professor of Psychology at Tel Aviv University since 1986, and has worked at Princeton, Harvard and Yale Universities. She is a certified clinical psychologist and health psychologist. In 1993, she established the unit of psychooncology at the Tel Aviv Ichilov Medical Center. in 1993 and the Center for Psychooncology Research at the Sheba Medical Center, Tel-Hashomer in 2007. She teaches full time at Tel-Aviv University, treats patients and does research at the Sheba Medical Center, and speaks and conducts workshops in different universities and conferences worldwide. Her major publications are in health, cognition, personality, and psychooncology and shes published over 200 articles in major journals and 19 scientific books about cognition, meaning, health, death and dying, personality traits, and the perception of art.