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H. pylori at Last Gets Its Due

By Drake Bennett — 2005

It may sound silly today, but Alexander's general ideas about psychosomatic illnesses survived in the work of another Hungarian emigrant, the endocrinologist Hans Selye. Known as "the father of stress," Selye, in 1936, was the first doctor to argue that stress was an identifiable medical phenomenon deserving of study.

Read on www.nytimes.com

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As Climate Worsens, Environmentalists Also Grapple with the Mental Toll of Activism

Today’s climate activists are driven by environmental worries that are increasingly more urgent, and which feel more personal.

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