Contributor

Dr. Paul J. Rosch

Chairman, American Institute of Stress

Paul J. Rosch, MD, FACP is Chairman of the Board of The American Institute of Stress and Clinical Professor of Medicine and Psychiatry at New York Medical College, and Honorary Vice President of the International Stress Management Association. He did his post- graduate training at Johns Hopkins and Walter Reed and has co-authored articles with Drs. Hans Selye, who originated our current concept of stress, and Flanders Dunbar, who coined the term psychosomatic and founded The American Psychosomatic Society. Dr. Rosch has been the recipient of numerous Awards here and abroad, including the Outstanding Physician's Award of the New York State Medical Society, Man of the Year Award with a Congressional Citation, and from Dr. Michael E. DeBakey President of the American Society for Contemporary Medicine and Surgery, for "contributions to our understanding of stress, health, and disease". He is a past president of the New York State Society of Internal Medicine, Fellow and Life Member of The American College of Physicians, and has served as Expert Consultant on Stress to the United States Center for Disease Control and Editor-in-Chief of Stress Medicine. His commentary on the relationships between stress and health over the past four decades have been published in every major medical journal, particularly with respect to job stress, cardiovascular disease and cancer, and he has been interviewed frequently on national TV, including 60 Minutes.

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