“…For example, traditional models of stress and stress adaptation, particularly that of Selye (1976), suggest that the cumulative ''wear and tear'' associated with emotional distress may eventually trigger allostatic mechanisms that increase the risk of illness and disease. Indeed, allostatic changes associated with enduring hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activation and concomitant elevations in cortisol Clin Psychol Med Settings (2012) 19:197-210 205 secretion include detrimental immunological processes, such as immunosuppression or excessive levels of proinflammatory cytokines (e.g., IL-6) (Robles, Glaser, & Kiecolt-Glaser, 2005), as well as increased risks of cardiovascular diseases (al'Absi & Wittmers, 2003;Flipovsky, Ducimetaere, Eschwaege, Richard, Rosselin, & Claude, 1996), diabetes (Korenblum et al, 2005;Roy, Roy, & Brown, 1998), osteoporosis (Chiodini et al, 2007), peptic ulcers (Lechin et al, 1990), and autoimmune diseases (Straub et al, 2004). As negative affect is considered to subsume negative emotions, such as depression (Watson & Clark, 1984;Watson, Clark, & Carey, 1988;Watson, Clark, & Tellegen, 1988), and increased secretion of cortisol is one of the best documented biological correlates of depression, it is perhaps not coincidental that the prevalence of the disorders mentioned previously is high among people with depression (Evans et al, 2005;Sherwood Brown, Varghese, & McEwen, 2004).…”