Part One: Overview and Introduction
1. Stress, Health, and Coping: An Overview
Susan Folkman
Part Two: Developmental Perspectives on Stress and Coping
2. Stress and Coping across the Lifespan
Carolyn Aldwin
3. Perceived Control and the Development of Coping
Ellen A. Skinner and Melanie J. Zimmer-Gembeck
Part Three: Social Aspects of Stress and Coping
4. Gender, Stress, and Coping
Vicki S. Helgeson
5. Affiliation and Stress
Shelley E. Taylor
6. Couples Coping with Chronic Illness
Tracey A. Revenson and Anita DeLongis
Part Four: Models of Stress, Coping, and Positive and Negative
Outcomes
7. Conservation of Resources Theory: Its Implication for Stress,
Health, and Resilience
Stevan E. Hobfoll
8. Coping with Bereavement
Margaret S. Stroebe
9. Resilience: The Meanings, Methods, and Measures of a Fundamental
Characteristic of Human Adaptation
Alex J. Zautra and John W. Reich
10. Positive Emotions, Coping, and Resilience
Michele M. Tugade
11. Hedonic Adaptation to Positive and Negative Experiences
Sonja Lyubomirsky
Part Five: Coping Processes and Positive and Negative Outcomes
12. Meaning, Coping, and Health and Well-Being
Crystal L. Park
13. Benefit Finding and Sense Making in Chronic Illness
Kenneth I. Pakenham
14. Religion and Coping: The Current State of Knowledge
Kenneth I. Pargament
15. Coping, Spirituality, and Health in HIV
Gail Ironson and Heidemarie Kremer
16. Self-Regulation of Unattainable Goals and Pathways to Quality
of Life
Carsten Wrosch
17. Future-Oriented Thinking, Proactive Coping, and the Management
of Potential Threats to Health and Well-Being
Lisa G. Aspinwall
Part Six: Assessing Coping: New Technologies and Concepts
18. Regulating Emotions during Stressful Experiences: The Adaptive
Utility of Coping through Emotional Approach
Annette L. Stanton
19. The Dynamics of Stress, Coping, and Health: Assessing Stress
and Coping Processes in Near Real Time
Mark D. Litt, Howard Tennen, and Glenn Affleck
Part Seven: Coping Interventions
20. Coping Interventions and the Regulation of Positive Affect
Judith Tedlie Moskowitz
21. Stress, Coping, and Health in HIV/AIDS
Michael H. Antoni
Part Eight: Conclusions and Future Directions
22. Stress, Health, and Coping: Synthesis, Commentary, and Future
Directions
Susan Folkman
Susan Folkman, Ph.D., is Professor Emeritus at the University of California, San Francisco.
"At the pinnacle of her career, Susan Folkman has gathered the most
thorough and up-to-date information on stress, health, and coping
that science has to offer. It reflects her signature attention to
the complexities and scope of human responses to adversity,
encompassing both negative and positive processes and outcomes.
Scientists and practitioners alike will benefit from learning the
latest research articulated by the leading scientists represented
in this
volume."
Barbara L. Fredrickson, Ph.D.
Kenan Distinguished Professor, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
"THE OXFORD HANDBOOK OF STRESS, HEALTH, AND COPING is an
outstanding collection of chapters authored by eminent figures in
the field. Not only is the contributor list outstanding, the
coverage of topics is also superb. This book is certain to become
the go-to volume for people from wide-ranging disciplines who are
interested in the topics of stress, coping, and health."
Charles S. Carver, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology, University of Miami
"This is a superb book. Susan Folkman, one of the pioneers of
stress and coping research, has assembled a rich collection of
essays by the current leaders of the field. The chapters in this
book provide a wonderful overview of the current state of the
field, integrating sharp critical insights with the newest research
developments into a single, well-organized volume that will serve
as a valuable resource for researchers, theorists, students,
educators, and
practitioners."
George A. Bonanno, Ph.D.
Professor of Clinical Psychology, Columbia University
"This excellent book is full of research findings that lay a solid
foundation for this area of study. The authors not only talk about
stress and coping processes, they also address intervention. It is
must reading for anyone involved in health psychology." -- Cermak
Health Services
"Folkman (emer., integrative medicine, Univ. of San Francisco) is a
superb editor. This handbook includes chapters from highly regarded
scholars of stress, coping, and health who apply their expertise to
summarize past research, describe current trends, and outline
future directions and applicationsEL This is a thorough, engaging
volume. Summing Up: Essential. Lower-division undergraduates
through faculty and professionals." -- American Library
Association
"This is a comprehensive look at stress and coping, from both a
developmental and social perspective, that also extensively
discusses the assessment of coping processes and the effects of
coping intervention. This excellent book is full of research
findings that lay a solid foundation for this area of study. The
authors not only talk about stress and coping processes, they also
address intervention. It is must reading for anyone involved in
health psychology.
92/100." -- Gary B Kaniuk, Psy.D., DOODY'S
"In her introduction to this excellent volume, Folkman describes
two themes in the literature on psychological stress, namely,
negative effects of stress on mental and physical health, and the
maintenance of well-being and resilience in individuals confronting
stress... This handbook amply demonstrates how both themes are on
prominent display in the active and productive field of
psychological stress science, whose leaders are well represented
among the
outstanding cast of contributors to this book. It is especially
effective in conveying recent progress regarding positive outcomes
of stress... Folkman's volume highlights coping and positive stress
outcomes
within a distinctly psychological perspective... and should find a
place alongside these and other major stress volumes on the
bookshelves of many students, researchers, and clinicians, where it
will serve as an essential resource for understanding psychological
responses to adversity." --Richard J. Contrada, review in
PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY
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