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Relational Health
How Social Connection Impacts Our Physical and Mental Wellbeing

Relational health offers a new framework for prevention and treatment efforts to improve health outcomes.

Laura S. Richman (Author)

9781316515570, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 2 March 2023

250 pages
23.5 x 15.5 x 1.4 cm, 0.38 kg

'The medical establishment has finally reached an epiphany:?the key to the prevention and management of chronic illness is behavioral change.?Yet a clear understanding of how to promote behavior change has remained elusive.?Laura Richman's Relational Health?will shift attention away from failed dependence on will power to evidence-based methods of harnessing interpersonal relationships to combat epidemics of obesity, opioid use, and depression.?This beautifully written, compelling, science-based book is a must read for health care providers, students, and community leaders.' Robert M. Kaplan, Stanford University

We tend to credit the healthy for good habits and discipline, and assign blame to the sick. All too often we view our health as a product of individual inputs rather than through a lens of interconnected, relational health. The relational health perspective offers an alternative way to view how our health is shaped and what the most productive avenues are for achieving long-term positive outcomes. This book draws on empirical research that illuminates how social relationships affect health outcomes, with a focus on three specific health problems: obesity, opioid use disorder, and depression in older adults. It incorporates examples of the untapped potential of community resources, social networks, and varied partnerships. The research presented is supplemented by perspectives from healthcare providers, patients and their families, and health policy experts, examining the role of relationships in health production and maintenance.

List of figures
List of boxes
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction
2. How social relationships matter for health
3. The relationship-driven factors in obesity, opioid use disorder, and depression in older adults
4. Current practices of medical intervention for obesity, opioids, and social isolation
5. Strategies for relational healthcare
6. Relational health policy priorities
7. Conclusions
Index.

Subject Areas: Clinical psychology [MMJ], Epidemiology & medical statistics [MBNS], Health psychology [MBNH9], Social, group or collective psychology [JMH]

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