1. H.S. Friedman, Ed., Hostility, Coping, and Health (American Psychological Association, Washington, DC, 1992). In this book, see especially the following chapters: on definitions and assessments of hostility-Barefoot. Siegel; on hostility and behavior and environmental interactions-Smith and Christensen, Scherwitz and Rugulies, Stokols; on sympathetic arousal in monkeys-Manuck. Kaplan, Clarkson, Adams, and Shively, on repression Pennebaker, Emmons; on cholesterol interventions-Kaplan, Manuck, and Shumaker. For further information on repression and health, see J.W. Pennebaker, Opening Up: The Healing Power of Confiding in Others (Morrow, New York, 1990). For a current study on recovery from surgery, see H.I. Mahler and J.A. KuIik, Preferences for hearth care involvement, perceived control and surgical recovery: A prospective study, Social Science and Medicine, 31, 743-751 (1990).
2. H.S. Friedman, Ed., Hostility, Coping, and Health (American Psychological Association, Washington, DC, 1992). In this book, see especially the following chapters: on definitions and assessments of hostility-Barefoot. Siegel; on hostility and behavior and environmental interactions-Smith and Christensen, Scherwitz and Rugulies, Stokols; on sympathetic arousal in monkeys-Manuck. Kaplan, Clarkson, Adams, and Shively, on repression Pennebaker, Emmons; on cholesterol interventions-Kaplan, Manuck, and Shumaker. For further information on repression and health, see J.W. Pennebaker, Opening Up: The Healing Power of Confiding in Others (Morrow, New York, 1990). For a current study on recovery from surgery, see H.I. Mahler and J.A. KuIik, Preferences for hearth care involvement, perceived control and surgical recovery: A prospective study, Social Science and Medicine, 31, 743-751 (1990).
3. Preferences for health care involvement, perceived control and surgical recovery: A prospective study
4. H.S. Friedman, The Self-Healing Personality: Why Some People Achieve Health and Others Succumb to Illness (Henry Holt, New York, 1991); H.S. Friedman and S. Booth-Kewley. The disease-prone personality, American Psychologist, 42, 539-555 (1987).