Carl E. Thoresen

Carl E. Thoresen
Born (1933-07-22)July 22, 1933[1]
San Francisco, California
Nationality US
Fields Psychology, Counseling psychology
Alma mater University of California, Berkeley

Carl E. Thoresen (born July 22, 1933[1]) is a psychologist on the faculty of Stanford University. Since 2005, he has also been a Senior Fellow at Santa Clara University.

Education and academic career

Many events and achievements in Thoresen's career as a psychologist were described in a profile published in 2009 in the Counseling Psychologist (CP), as part of its "Legacies and Traditions" series.[2] Thoresen graduated with a B.A. from the University of California, Berkeley with a bachelor's degree in history (1955), later receiving his MA (Counseling, 1960) and PhD (Psychological Studies, Counseling Psychology, 1964) from Stanford University. After a brief period as an Assistant Professor of Counseling at Michigan State (1965–1967), he returned to Stanford as Assistant Professor of Education (1967). From 1975 until 2000 he served as Professor of Education, and by Courtesy, Psychology, and Psychiatry. Since 2000, he has held the same title with emeritus status. Since 2005, he has also been a Senior Fellow at the Spirituality and Health Institute at Santa Clara University.

According to his CP profile,[2] he was also:

Thoresen has been awarded honorary doctorates by Uppsala University, Sweden (Psychology, 1986), and by the National University of Ireland (Literature, 2004). [3] He was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1973. He is an elected Fellow of several major organisations, including the American Association for the Advancement of Science (1982-), the American Psychological Association (1972-) and the Society of Behavioural Medicine (1986-). His professional publications number more than 200.

Research and influence

According to the CP interview, Thoresen's "scholarly work, professional service, teaching, and mentorship have motivated many counseling psychologists to radically expand their areas of inquiry. He was among the first to focus counseling on observable behaviors and to apply psychological science and interventions to physical problems in medical settings. More recently, he has pioneered the study of the interface between spirituality and health" (p. 275).[2]

Beginning in 1973, Thoresen collaborated with well-known cardiologist Meyer Friedman. They worked together on the Recurrent Coronary Prevention Project, which followed 1013 heart attack survivors for 4.5 years to determine effects from altering their coronary-prone (type A) behavior patterns. Thoresen was responsible "to help design and direct the psychological treatment program based on a behavioral self-control perspective" (p. 282).[2] Results indicated that behavioral counseling reduced rates of recurrence to 13% (from 21% or higher). After the first year, those receiving behavioral counseling also experienced significantly lower rates of death. The study showed, "for the first time, within a controlled experimental design, that altering type A behavior reduces cardiac morbidity and mortality in post infarction patients" (p. 653).[4]

References

  1. 1 2 Library of Congress information record gives birthday of July 22, 1933 (accessed 17 December 2011).
  2. 1 2 3 4 Alex H. S. Harris (2009). Carl Thoresen: The evolving pioneer. The Counseling Psychologist, v37, n2, 275-295. doi:10.1177/0011000008316673.
  3. Text of the Introductory Address Delivered by Professor Eleanor O'Leary. Accessed 6 Nov 2009.
  4. Meyer Friedman, Carl E. Thoresen, James J. Gill, Diane Ulmer, Lynda H. Powell, Virginia A. Price, Byron Brown, Leonti Thompson, David D. Rabin, William S. Breall, Edward Bourg, Richard Levy, Theodore Dixon (1986). Alteration of type a behavior and its effect on cardiac recurrences in post myocardial infarction patients: Summary results of the recurrent coronary prevention project. American Heart Journal, v112 n4, pp653-665. PMID 3766365 doi:10.1016/0002-8703(86)90458-8.

External links

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