Books

The Science of Homeopathy – page 42

2. Lilienfeld and Gifford, eds., Chronic Disease and Public Health (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1966). Quotes an excellent study in Baltimore showing the percentage of people with one or more chronic conditions at different age levels. The “substantial chronic conditions” rose directly with age from 17.4% in the group under 15, to 85.2% for the group 65 and over.

3. Hinkle and Wolfe, “The Nature of Man’s Adaptation to His Total Environment, and the Relation of This to Illness,” Archives of Internal Medicine 99: 442 (1957). An excellent review of three major studies on the incidence of chronic disease symptoms in population groups which are not selected according to complaint, with emphasis on psychosomatic correlations. A total of 4500 people were included. Conclusions:

 

  1. Members of otherwise homogeneous populations have differ- ences in susceptibility to illness.
  2. Those with high susceptibility are susceptible to all types of illness. There are more organs involved, more accidents, more distur- bances of mood, thought, and behavior.
  3. Illness is not randomly distributed through life, but clustered in periods of a few years.
  4. Clusters occur at times when the person perceives himself as having difficulty adapting to the environment; a very direct correla- tion.
  5. Susceptibility is related both to differences in adaptive capacities and actual environmental situations.
  6. The form of susceptibility has little to do with social environ- ment, but this does affect the time the clusters occur and their course.

 

4. Simeons, A.T.W., Man’s Presumptuous Brain (London: Long- mans, Green, 1960). An excellent description of psychosomatic per- sonality types.

5. Hinkle and Wolfe, “The Nature of Man’s Adaptation.” A good description of specific personality states correlated with specific physi- cal symptoms, as tested by hypnotic induction of the desired attitudes and later observation of physiological changes.

6. Eastwood, M., The Relation Between Physical and Mental Ill- ness (Toronto: univ. of Toronto Press, 1975). One of the most thorough literature reviews of the entire field of psychosomatic medicine; studies