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One or more keywords matched the following properties of Fernandez, Ephram
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overview I have two main areas of scholarly interest. The first is medical psychology or what is often called health psychology. The second is the science of affect. Within medical psychology, my publications have focused on pain, a universal phenomenon, now regarded by some clinicians as a fifth vital sign, and always a challenge for scholars of the mind. One path of enquiry I have pursued is the language of pain and the clues it holds for underlying pathophysiology and diagnoses of pain syndromes; Funded by a grant from the National Institutes of Health, this research has led to the validation of a new Pain Descriptor System, aspects of which have been published in The Journal of Pain. Both in research and teaching, I view a variety of medical ailments as influenced by basic principles of psychosomatics. These go well beyond mere conjunction of psyche and soma to what I call "dynamic interactions" between physical symptoms and affective phenomena such as anxiety, depression, and anger. In the treatment of such conditions, I espouse the use of cognitive-behavioral techniques within a broader interdisciplinary framework for health promotion and disease prevention. Within the area of affect science, I have proposed a construct called the core of negative affect that encompasses anxiety, depression, and anger. The third element in this triad has been under-researched and is now a primary focus of my attention. Most of my publications on this topic have tackled the problem of maladaptive anger. My recent work in this area focuses on integrative psychotherapy for dysfunctional anger and the assessment of multiple dimensions of anger apparent in clinical cases as well as in everyday life. A cognitive-motivational model is fundamental to the assessment and regulation of anger, though experiential techniques can also be incorporated as in my book “Treatments for Anger in Specific Populations: Theory, Application and Outcome” (Oxford University Press). This offers a heuristic for the study and treatment of other emotional disorders too. These pursuits address important problems and prospects for improvement in the human condition. They won't bring us immortality or nirvana but they are likely to make us healthier and happier.
One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to Fernandez, Ephram
Item TypeName
Academic Article Parsimonious collection of pain descriptors: classification and calibration by pain patients.
Academic Article Descriptors of pain sensation: a dual hierarchical model of latent structure.
Concept Pain
Concept Pain Measurement
Academic Article On the putative uniqueness of cancer pain: do psychological principles apply?
Academic Article Sensory and affective components of pain: separation and synthesis.
Academic Article An "open-transformed scale" for correcting ceiling effects and enhancing retest reliability: the example of pain.
Academic Article The utility of cognitive coping strategies for altering pain perception: a meta-analysis.
Academic Article A classification system of cognitive coping strategies for pain.
Academic Article The scope and significance of anger in the experience of chronic pain.
Academic Article Response-reinforcement relationships in chronic pain syndrome: applicability of Herrnstein's law.
Academic Article Demand characteristics underlying differential ratings of sensory versus affective components of pain.
Academic Article Sensory and affective predictors of overall pain and emotions associated with affective pain.
Academic Article Reclassification and rescaling of McGill Pain Questionnaire verbal descriptors of pain sensation: a replication.
Academic Article A parsimonious set of verbal descriptors of pain sensation derived from the McGill Pain Questionnaire.
Academic Article Expectancy variables predicting tolerance and avoidance of pain in chronic pain patients.
Academic Article The relationship between anger and pain.
Academic Article Affective and evaluative descriptors of pain in the McGill pain questionnaire: reduction and reorganization.
Academic Article Coping style influences compliance with multidisciplinary pain management.
Academic Article Male circumcision: pain, trauma and psychosexual sequelae.
Academic Article Sensory Versus Affective Pain Descriptors Predicting Functional Versus Psychosocial Disability.
Search Criteria
  • Pain
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