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Recovery From Schizophrenia: Psychiatry And Political Economy

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308 NOTES11 Eyer, J. and Sterling, P., “Stress-related mortality and social organization,” Review ofRadical <strong>Political</strong> Economics, 9:1–44 1977.12 Coates, D., Moyer, S. and Wellman, B., “The Yorklea Study of urban mentalhealth: Symptoms, problems and life events,” Canadian Journal of Public Health, 60:471–81, 1969.13 Myers, J.K., Lindenthal, J.J. and Pepper, M.P., “Social class, life events andpsychiatric symptoms: A longitudinal study,” in B.S.Dohrenwend andB.P.Dohrenwend (eds), Stressful Life Events: Their Nature and Effects, New York:Wiley,1974; Dohrenwend, B.S., “Social status and stressful life events,” Journal ofPersonal and Social Psychology, 28:225–35, 1973.14 Pearlin, L.I. and Radabaugh, D.W., “Economic strains and coping functions ofalcohol,” American Journal of Sociology, 82:652–63, 1976.15 Wilkinson, R.G., Kawachi, I. and Kennedy, B.P, “Mortality, the social environment,crime and violence,” in M.Bartley, D.Blane and G.D.Smith (eds), The Sociology ofHealth Inequalities, Oxford: Blackwell, 1998, pp. 19–37; Kawachi, I., “Incomeinequality and health,” in L.F.Berkman and I.Kawachi (eds), Social Epidemiology,New York: Oxford University Press, 2000, pp. 76–94.16 Kaplan, G.A., Pamuk, E., Lynch, J.W. et al., “Income inequality and mortality inthe United States: Analysis of mortality and potential pathways,” British MedicalJournal, 312:999–1003, 1996.17 Ben-Shlomo, Y., White, I.R. and Marmot, M., “Does the variation in thesocioeconomic characteristics of an area affect mortality?” British Medical Journal, 312:1013–14, 1996.18 Wilkinson, “Mortality, the social environment, crime and violence, p. 19; Kawachi,I., ‘Income inequality and health,’ p. 86.19 Wilkinson, “Mortality, the social environment, crime and violence,” pp. 21–2.20 Faris, R.E.L. and Dunham, H.W., Mental Disorders in Urban Areas: An EcologicalStudy of <strong>Schizophrenia</strong> and Other Psychoses, Chicago: University of Chicago Press,1939.21 Schroeder, C.W., “Mental disorders in cities,” American Journal of Sociology, 48: 40–8,1942.22 Gerard, D.L. and Houston, L.G., “Family setting and the social ecology ofschizophrenia,” Psychiatric Quarterly, 27:90–101, 1953.23 Gardner, E.A. and Babigian, H.M., “A longitudinal comparison of psychiatricservice to selected socioeconomic areas of Monroe County, New York,” AmericanJournal of Orthopsychiatry, 36:818–28, 1966.24 Klee, G.D., Spiro E., Bahn, A.K. and Gorwitz, K., “An ecological analysis ofdiagnosed mental illness in Baltimore,” in R.R.Monroe, G.D.Klee and E.B.Brody(eds), Psychiatric Epidemiology and Mental Health Planning, Washington, DC:American Psychiatric Association, 1967, pp. 107–48.25 Sundby, P. and Nyjus, P., “Major and minor psychiatric disorders in males in Oslo:An epidemiological study,” Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 39:519–47, 1963.26 Hare, E.H., “Mental illness and social conditions in Bristol,” Journal of MentalScience, 102:349–57, 1956.27 Clark, R.E., “Psychoses, income and occupational prestige,” American Journal ofSociology, 54:433–40, 1949.28 Hollingshead, A.B. and Redlich, F.C., Social Class and Mental Illness, New York:Wiley, 1958.

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