Getty Images |
By Jean Stinnett, Special Contributor
• San Angelo Standard Times
SAN ANGELO, TEXAS - Dr. Hans Selye (1907-82), Hungarian-Canadian endocrinologist, is known as the father of stress, defining it in 1936 as “the non-specific response of the body to any demand for change.” He noticed physiological changes in the human body that were caused by reaction to extreme shifts in our environment, prolonged frustration, and the feeling of having little or no control over life’s events ...
• Read the rest of this SAST report
No comments:
Post a Comment