Cardiovascular disease continues to be the number ioral medicine" was
developed and shaped into the one source of morbidity and mortality in
our coun- following definition: try. Despite a 35% reduction since 1964,
these Behavioral medicine is the interdisciplinary field con- diseases,
particularly coronary heart disease cerned with the development and
integration of behav- (CHD), claim nearly 1,000,000 lives each year in
ioral and biomedical science knowledge and techniques the United States
(Havlik & Feinleib, 1979). relevant to the understanding of health and
illness and The Framingham study, among others, has iden- the
application of this knowledge and these techniques to prevention,
diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation. tified three major risk factors
implicated in the de- (Schwartz & Weiss, 1978) velopment of CHD:
smoking, elevated serum cho- lesterol, and high blood pressure (Castelli
et at., This concept of "biobehavioral" collaboration 1986). Given that
these factors account for less challenged scientists and clinicians of
many disci- than 50% of the variance associated with CHD plines to
consider how they might more effectively (Jenkins, 1976), it has become
obvious that addi- develop diagnostic, treatment, and prevention tional
risk factors must be identified if further pro- strategies by merging
their perspectives to address gress is to be made in disease prevention
and simultaneously, among others, behavioral, psy- control.