1. PUBLIC AND PSYCHIATRIC CONCEPTIONS OF MENTAL ILLNESS.
- Author
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Manis, Jerome G., Hunt, Chester L., Brawer, Milton J., and Kercher, Leonard C.
- Subjects
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MENTAL illness , *PSYCHIATRY , *PSYCHIATRISTS , *BEHAVIOR , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *MENTAL health - Abstract
This paper coin pares the conceptions of mental illness held by a group of psychiatrists and a random sample of the general public in the same locality. The hypothesis was that the public, but not the psychiatrists, would tend to consider troublesome behavior as being more indicative of mental illness than non-troublesome behavior. Statements representing five pairs of troublesome non-troublesome types of behavior were rated by both groups as indicators of mental illness. Analysis of the data, using the statements at face value and with a weighting system, did not support the hypothesis. Both public and psychiatrists appear to have similar views but not in the expected order. Most notably, manic behavior ranked very low among the conceptions of mental illness. This finding accords with recent reports of a decline in the incidence of manic- depressive psychoses. Is this decline due to changes in modern society that alter public and psychiatric conceptions of mental illness? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1965
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