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When a person faces serious illness, having the support of one's partner can help protect against the full ravages of disease, and even hasten recovery. However, too much support can have grave clinical consequences for sufferers and exact a heavy emotional and financial toll on caregivers. Social Support, Health, and Illness is an up-to-date analysis of how social support can either help or hinder recovery for patients.A useful resource for clinical practitioners and researchers, Social Support, Health, and Illness addresses the effects of intimate support on a wide variety of medical and psychiatric conditions, including cancer, dementia, and chronic pain. Ranjan Roy uncovers the complexities underlying social support by tracing the concept's historical and theoretical development. Synthesizing insights from the latest research findings, Social Support, Health, and Illness offers a comprehensive look at the modifying and mitigating factors of intimacy on the outcomes of disease.
Ranjan Roy is a professor in the Faculty of Social Work and the Department of Clinical Health Psychology at the University of Manitoba.
Preface1 Social Support and Health: An Overview2 Chronic Childhood Physical Illnesses: Special Challenges 3 Spousal and Long-term Partnership Support: How Critical Is It?4 Chronic Pain and Social Support5 Depression in Perspective6 Dementia and Social Support: Who Cares for the Caregivers?7 Breast Cancer and Social Support: Special Challenges8 HIV/AIDS and Social Support: A Troubled Zone9 Social Support and Network Interventions10 AfterthoughtsIndex