Literature DB >> 25031047

Social disorder and diagnostic order: the US Mental Hygiene Movement, the Midtown Manhattan study and the development of psychiatric epidemiology in the 20th century.

Dana March1, Gerald M Oppenheimer2.   

Abstract

Recent scholarship regarding psychiatric epidemiology has focused on shifting notions of mental disorders. In psychiatric epidemiology in the last decades of the 20th century and the first decade of the 21st century, mental disorders have been perceived and treated largely as discrete categories denoting an individual's mental functioning as either pathological or normal. In the USA, this grew partly out of evolving modern epidemiological work responding to the State's commitment to measure the national social and economic burdens of psychiatric disorders and subsequently to determine the need for mental health services and to survey these needs over time. Notably absent in these decades have been environmentally oriented approaches to cultivating normal, healthy mental states, approaches initially present after World War II. We focus here on a set of community studies conducted in the 1950s, particularly the Midtown Manhattan study, which grew out of a holistic conception of mental health that depended on social context and had a strong historical affiliation with: the Mental Hygiene Movement and the philosophy of its founder, Adolf Meyer; the epidemiological formation of field studies and population surveys beginning early in the 20th century, often with a health policy agenda; the recognition of increasing chronic disease in the USA; and the radical change in orientation within psychiatry around World War II. We place the Midtown Manhattan study in historical context--a complex narrative of social institutions, professional formation and scientific norms in psychiatry and epidemiology, and social welfare theory that begins during the Progressive era (1890-1920) in the USA.
© The Author 2014; all rights reserved. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiological Association.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Psychiatry; community studies; health services; history; methods; psychiatric epidemiology; survey research

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25031047      PMCID: PMC4118722          DOI: 10.1093/ije/dyu117

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Epidemiol        ISSN: 0300-5771            Impact factor:   7.196


  21 in total

1.  Black-white differences in serum lipids and lipoproteins in Evans County.

Authors:  H A Tyroler; C G Hames; I Krishan; S Heyden; G Cooper; J C Cassel
Journal:  Prev Med       Date:  1975-12       Impact factor: 4.018

2.  Part 1: the history of 19th century neurology and the American Neurological Association.

Authors:  Christopher G Goetz; Teresa A Chmura; Douglas Lanska
Journal:  Ann Neurol       Date:  2003       Impact factor: 10.422

3.  Anomie in the metropolis: the city of American sociology and psychiatry.

Authors:  Hans Pols
Journal:  Osiris       Date:  2003       Impact factor: 0.548

4.  Measurement and classification in socio-psychiatric epidemiology: midtown Manhattan study (1954) and midtown Manhattan restudy (1974).

Authors:  L Srole
Journal:  J Health Soc Behav       Date:  1975-12

5.  Mistrust of numbers: the difficult development of psychiatric epidemiology in France, 1940-80.

Authors:  Nicolas Henckes
Journal:  Int J Epidemiol       Date:  2014-06-13       Impact factor: 7.196

6.  National Institute of Mental Health Diagnostic Interview Schedule. Its history, characteristics, and validity.

Authors:  L N Robins; J E Helzer; J Croughan; K S Ratcliff
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  1981-04

7.  A comparison of clinical and diagnostic interview schedule diagnoses. Physician reexamination of lay-interviewed cases in the general population.

Authors:  J E Helzer; L N Robins; L T McEvoy; E L Spitznagel; R K Stoltzman; A Farmer; I F Brockington
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  1985-07

8.  Comparison of the lay Diagnostic Interview Schedule and a standardized psychiatric diagnosis. Experience in eastern Baltimore.

Authors:  J C Anthony; M Folstein; A J Romanoski; M R Von Korff; G R Nestadt; R Chahal; A Merchant; C H Brown; S Shapiro; M Kramer
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  1985-07

9.  The Midtown Manhattan Longitudinal Study vs 'the Mental Paradise Lost' doctrine. A controversy joined.

Authors:  L Srole; A K Fischer
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  1980-02

10.  Perspectives on the past and future of psychiatric epidemiology. The 1981 Rema Lapouse Lecture.

Authors:  B P Dohrenwend; B S Dohrenwend
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1982-11       Impact factor: 9.308

View more
  2 in total

1.  Getting On in Gotham: The Midtown Manhattan Study and Putting the "Social" in Psychiatry.

Authors:  Matthew Smith
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2021-09-07

Review 2.  Population-Based Approaches to Mental Health: History, Strategies, and Evidence.

Authors:  Jonathan Purtle; Katherine L Nelson; Nathaniel Z Counts; Michael Yudell
Journal:  Annu Rev Public Health       Date:  2020-01-06       Impact factor: 21.981

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.