462 Health Psychology
conducted at the 12th Conference of the European Health
Psychology Society, Vienna, Austria.
Belar, C. D., Brown, R. A., Hersch, L. E., Hornyak, L. M., Rozen-
sky, R. H., Sheridan, E., P., et al. (2001). Education for health.
Monitor on Psychology, 32(1), 56.
Belar, C. D., Brown, R. A., Hersch, L. E., Hornyak, L. M., Rozensky,
R. H., Sheridan, E. P., et al. (2001). Self assessment in clinical
health psychology: A model for ethical expansion of practice.
Professional Psychology, 32,135–141.
Belar, C. D., & Seigel, L. J. (1983). A survey of postdoctoral
training programs in health psychology. Health Psychology, 2,
413–425.
Belar, C. D., Wilson, E., & Hughes, H. (1982). Health psychology
training in doctoral psychology programs. Health Psychology, 1,
289–299.
Califano, J. A., Jr. (1979). Healthy people: The Surgeon General’s
report on health promotion and disease prevention(Stock No.
017–001-00416–2). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing
Office.
Cannon, W. B. (1915). Bodily changes in pain, hunger, fear and
rage(2nd ed.). New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts.
Currie, C., Hurrelmann, K., Settertobulte, W., Smith, R., & Todd,
J. (Eds.). (2000).Health and health behavior among young
people(HEPCA series). Geneva, Switzerland: World Health
Organization.
Dunbar, H. (1935). Emotions and bodily changes: A survey of liter-
ature on psychosomatic relationships: 1910–1933.New York:
Columbia University Press.
Engel, G. L. (1977). The need for a new medical model: A challenge
for bio-medicine.Science, 196,129–136.
Fordyce, W. E. (1976). Behavioral methods for chronic pain and
illness.St. Louis, MO: Mosby.
Franz, I. D. (1913). On psychology and medical education. Science,
38,555–566.
Gatchel, R. (1993). Psychophysiological disorders: Past and
present perspectives. In R. Gatchel & E. Blanchard (Eds.),
Psychophysiological disorders: Research and clinical applica-
tions(pp. 1–21). Washington, DC: American Psychological
Association.
Gentry, W. D. (Ed.). (1984). Handbook of behavioral medicine.
New York: Guilford Press.
Gentry, W. D., & Matarazzo, J. D. (1981). Medical psychology:
Three decades of growth and development. In L. A. Bradley & C.
K. Prokop (Eds.), Medical psychology: Contributions to
behavioral medicine(pp. 6–15). San Diego, CA: Academic Press.
Gentry, W. D., Street, W. J., Masur, R. T., & Asken, M. J. (1981).
Training in medical psychology: A survey of graduate and intern-
ship training programs.Professional Psychology, 13,397– 403.
Graham, D. T. (1972). Psychosomatic medicine. In N. S. Greenfield &
R. A. Sternbach (Eds.),Handbook of psychophysiology(pp. 839–
924). New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
Graham, D. T., Stern, J. A., & Winokur, G. (1958). Experimental
investigation of the specificity hypothesis in psychosomatic
disease.Psychomatic Medicine, 20,446–457.
Guze, S. B., Matarazzo, J. D., & Saslow, G. (1953). A formula-
tion of principles of comprehensive medicine with special
reference to learning theory.Journal of Clinical Psychology, 9,
127–136.
Institute of Medicine. (1982). Health and behavior: Frontiers of
research in the biobehavioral sciences(Report of a study by
committee of the Institute of Medicine, Division of Mental
Health and Behavioral Medicine, NTIS Accession No. PB 82
260–268). Washington, DC: National Academy Press.
Jacobson, E. (1938). Progressive relaxation.Chicago: University of
Chicago Press.
Johnston, M. (1993). Health psychology in Europe: Potential in
diversity. In J. Wilson-Barnett & J. M. Clark (Eds.), Research in
health promotion and nursing(pp. 15–29). Hampshire, England:
Macmillan.
Johnston, M. (1994). Current trends. Psychologist, 7(3), 113–118.
Johnston, M. (1997). How health psychology makes a difference.
Irish Journal of Psychology, 18(1), 4–12.
Johnston, M., & Weinman, J. (1995). Health psychology. In Profes-
sional psychology handbook(pp. 61–68). Leicester, England:
British Psychological Society.
Kaplan, H. I. (1975). Current psychodynamic concepts in psychoso-
matic medicine. In R. O. Pasnau (Ed.), Consultation-liaison
psychiatry.New York: Grune & Stratton.
Leigh, H., & Reiser, M. F. (1980). Biological, psychological, and
social dimensions of medical practice.New York: Plenum Press.
Levenson, D. (1994). Mind, body, medicine: A history of the
American Psychosomatic Society.Washington, DC: American
Psychosomatic Society.
Lipowski, Z. J. (1977). Psychosomatic medicine in the seventies:
An overview. American Journal of Psychiatry, 134(3), 233–243.
Lipowski, Z. J. (1986). Psychosomatic medicine: Past and present,
Part 1: Historical background. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry,
31,2–7.
Lipsitt, D. (1999). A century of psychosomatic medicine: Successes
and failures. In M. Dinis (Ed.), Reflexões sobre psicossomática
[Reflections on psychosomatics] (pp. 11–22). Lisbon, Portugal:
Sociedade Portuguesa de Psicossomática [Portuguese Society of
Psychosomatics].
Lunt, I. (2000). Europsych project funded by the European Union
(EU) under Leonardo da Vinci program. European Psychologist,
5 (2), 162–164.
Lunt, I., & Poortinga, Y. (1996). Internationalizing psychology: The
case of Europe. American Psychologist, 51(5), 504–508.
Lyons, A. S., & Petrucelli, R. J. (1978). Medicine: An illustrated his-
tory.New York: Abrams.
Maes, S. (1990). Editor’s foreward. European Health Psychology
Society Newsletter, 1,1–2.