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Recovery From Schizophrenia: Psychiatry And Political Economy

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310 NOTES47 Torrey, E.F. and Bowler, A., “Geographical distribution of insanity in America:Evidence for an urban factor,” <strong>Schizophrenia</strong> Bulletin, 16:591–604, 1990.48 Lewis, G., David, A., <strong>And</strong>reasson, S. et al., “<strong>Schizophrenia</strong> and city life,” Lancet,340:137–40, 1992; Takei, N., Sham, P.C., O’Callaghan, E. et al., “<strong>Schizophrenia</strong>:increased risk associated with winter and city birth—a case control study in 12regions within England and Wales,” Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health,49:106–7, 1995.49 Mortensen, P.B., Pedersen, C.B., Westergaard, T. et al., “Effects of family historyand place and season of birth on the risk of schizophrenia,” New England Journal ofMedicine, 340:603–8, 1999.50 Mandel, E., Long Waves of Capitalist Development: The Marxist Interpretation,Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1980; Saul, S.B., The Myth of the GreatDepression, 1873–1896, London: Macmillan, 1969; Church, R.A., The GreatVictorian Boom, 1850–1873, London: Macmillan, 1975.51 Willcox, W.G., “A study in vital statistics,” <strong>Political</strong> Science Quarterly, 8 (1), 1893.52 Hooker, R.H., “On the correlation of the marriage rate with foreign trade,” Journalof the Royal Statistical Society, 64:485, 1901.53 Ogburn, W.F. and Thomas, D.S., “The influence of the business cycle on certainsocial conditions,” Journal of the American Statistical Association, 18:324–40, 1922.54 Thomas, D.S., Social Aspects of the Business Cycle, New York: Gordon & Breach,1968. First published by Kuopf in 1927.55 Catalano, R. and Dooley, C.D., “Economic predictors of depressed mood andstressful life events in a metropolitan community,” Journal of Health and SocialBehavior, 18:292–307, 1977; Dooley, D. and Catalano, R., “Economic, life, anddisorder changes: Time-series analyses,” American Journal of Community Psychology, 7:381–96, 1979.56 Dooley and Catalano, op. cit., p. 393.57 Dooley, D., Catalano, R., Jackson, R. and Brownell, A., “Economic, life, andsymptom changes in a nonmetropolitan community,” Journal of Health and SocialBehavior, 22:144–54, 1981.58 Ibid.59 Gore, S., “The effect of social support in moderating the health consequences ofunemployment,” Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 19:157–65, 1978.60 Brenner, M.H., Estimating the Social Costs of National Economic Policy: Implications forMental and Physical Health, and Criminal Aggression, prepared for the Joint EconomicCommittee of the Congress of the United States, Washington, DC: USGovernment Printing Office, 1976.61 Ibid., p. 41.62 Ibid., p. 39.63 Kasl, S.V., “Mortality and the business cycle: Some questions about researchstrategies when utilizing macro-social and ecological data,” American Journal of PublicHealth, 69:784–8, 1979, p. 786.64 Mandel, E., Marxist Economic Theory, vol. 1, translated by B.Pearcel, New York:Monthly Review Press, 1968, ch. 11.65 Samuelson, P.A., Economics, 11th edn, New York: McGraw-Hill, 1980, ch. 14.66 Eyer and Sterling, “Stress-related mortality;” Eyer, J., “Prosperity as a cause of death,”International Journal of Health Services, 7:125–50, 1977; Eyer, J., “Does

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