Mental Health in the Metropolis: the Midtown Manhattan Study: Thomas A. C. Rennie Series in Social Psychiatry, Volume 2Blakiston Division, McGraw-Hill, 1963 - Social psychiatry |
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Page 159
... proportion of patients from homes broken in childhood , this proportion may be no larger in the patient population than in the metropolitan population as a whole . As a matter of fact , the proportion of Midtown expatients from homes ...
... proportion of patients from homes broken in childhood , this proportion may be no larger in the patient population than in the metropolitan population as a whole . As a matter of fact , the proportion of Midtown expatients from homes ...
Page 384
... proportion of each socio- economic group , giving the presumed stressful responses . The three status groups showed no differences in the proportion of parents in poor health , the number of mother's psychosomatic conditions , the ...
... proportion of each socio- economic group , giving the presumed stressful responses . The three status groups showed no differences in the proportion of parents in poor health , the number of mother's psychosomatic conditions , the ...
Page 467
... proportion reporting eco- nomic deprivation in childhood . Report worse adult physical health . More persons with ... proportion of psychotics , regardless of stress . Show sharp increase in proportion of neurotics with increase of ...
... proportion reporting eco- nomic deprivation in childhood . Report worse adult physical health . More persons with ... proportion of psychotics , regardless of stress . Show sharp increase in proportion of neurotics with increase of ...
Contents
Stress and Strain | 1 |
tual Framework The Analytical Framework | 16 |
An Overview | 31 |
Copyright | |
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100 per cent ACCORDING actually adaptive adult Answer associated AVERAGE MENTAL HEALTH behavior better broken homes cent Chapter character child childhood combined compared confidence death differences disagreements disorder economic effect example experience fact factors fathers feel four given greater hard higher impairment important included increase indicate individual involved less living low SES lower males marriage married mean mental disturbance Mental Health Rating mental health risk middle Midtown mobile mothers negative Neurotic never occupation parents particular patterns Perhaps persons poor health Poor Physical Health possible present Probable problems proportion psychiatric psychosomatic Psychotics Quarrels question relationship relatively reported respondents ridits sample seems separation similar social Socioeconomic Status strain Stress Score symptoms Table tend tion Total Number types variable various widowed women Worries worse