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Page 49
... psychiatrists he chose to evaluate mental health in the Midtown sample . However , the possibility remained open that both psychiatrists unwit- tingly would operate under certain shared tendencies toward the same kinds of errors . If so ...
... psychiatrists he chose to evaluate mental health in the Midtown sample . However , the possibility remained open that both psychiatrists unwit- tingly would operate under certain shared tendencies toward the same kinds of errors . If so ...
Page 50
... psychiatric classification of respondents be made blind to the sociocultural data on each sample individual.63 On their part , the Midtown psychiatrists emphasized that they could not weigh the mental health import of a set of symptoms ...
... psychiatric classification of respondents be made blind to the sociocultural data on each sample individual.63 On their part , the Midtown psychiatrists emphasized that they could not weigh the mental health import of a set of symptoms ...
Page 400
... psychiatrists . The basis for these psychiatric weightings were judgments of a variety of information derived from the interview report , which was designed to cover as large a range of psychopathology as was necessary to arrive at the ...
... psychiatrists . The basis for these psychiatric weightings were judgments of a variety of information derived from the interview report , which was designed to cover as large a range of psychopathology as was necessary to arrive at the ...
Contents
Reasons for the Study | 3 |
Design | 26 |
Mental Health Ratings | 59 |
Copyright | |
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age groups American behavior Berkeley Catholic chapter classification clinical criterion cultural demographic factors differences disease E. B. White Epidemiology evidence frequency functioning Haven Home Survey Sample hospital hypotheses immigrants impairment rates indicated individual investigation latter Malzberg Manhattan marital status mental disorder Mental health categories mental health composition mental health rating mental illness mental morbidity Midtown population Midtown sample Midtown Study mobility morbidity rates observed occupational origin out-patient over-all own-SES parents pathology patient rates personality population density possible potential present prevalence problem professional psychiatric psychiatrists psychotherapy Puerto Ricans question range relatively religious Rennie reported respondent's role sample respondents sample's segment SES-origin Sick-Well ratio significant social class Social Psychiatry sociocultural socioeconomic status somatic specific strata stratum Study's Survey Sample Age symptom formation Table tend tion Treatment Census trend U.S. Census Bureau UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA York City