Mental Health in the Metropolis: the Midtown Manhattan Study: Thomas A. C. Rennie Series in Social Psychiatry, Volume 2Blakiston Division, McGraw-Hill, 1962 - Social psychiatry |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 79
Page 73
... higher rates of death and disease in Midtown indicate a surprising degree of social pathology . In view of the better medical facilities in Mid- town , the higher death and disease rates may indicate inadequate use of services , in ...
... higher rates of death and disease in Midtown indicate a surprising degree of social pathology . In view of the better medical facilities in Mid- town , the higher death and disease rates may indicate inadequate use of services , in ...
Page 236
... higher status families for the father to have more education than the mother . This is particularly true of families with professional and semiprofessional fathers . The proportions of fathers with higher edu- cation than their wives ...
... higher status families for the father to have more education than the mother . This is particularly true of families with professional and semiprofessional fathers . The proportions of fathers with higher edu- cation than their wives ...
Page 440
... higher SES parents allowed more expression of aggression toward other children and toward themselves . Davis18 found that middle - class parents were less tolerant of aggression . Even though Davis studied older preadolescent children ...
... higher SES parents allowed more expression of aggression toward other children and toward themselves . Davis18 found that middle - class parents were less tolerant of aggression . Even though Davis studied older preadolescent children ...
Contents
Stress and Strain | 1 |
An Overview | 31 |
Introduction The Community Sociography Operation | 45 |
Copyright | |
28 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
100 per cent adult factors Adult Mental Health Adult Poor Physical Anomie associated AVERAGE MENTAL HEALTH average ridit behavior cent level Chapter Character Negatively Perceived child childhood factors clinical confidence between ridits considered dichotomized Difference in test disagreements divorce downward mobile Economic Deprivation greater hay fever high SES increase indicate individual less level of confidence LOW MIDDLE HIGH low SES low status marriage married mental disorder mental disturbance MENTAL HEALTH MH Mental Health Rating mental health risk MIDDLE HIGH TOTAL Midtown mobile mothers neurosis occupation Parental Worries patterns poor health Poor Mental Health Poor Physical Health Probable Neurotic Probable Psychotics problems PROPORTIONS AND AVERAGE psychiatric psychiatrists psychosomatic conditions Quarrels questionnaire remarried reported respondent's RESPONDENTS ACCORDING Ridits not computed sample social psychiatry Socioeconomic Status LOW strain stress factors Stress Score superego Symptom Groups Table test variable tion Total Number trichotomized widowed worse