13.07.2015 Views

Recovery From Schizophrenia: Psychiatry And Political Economy

Recovery From Schizophrenia: Psychiatry And Political Economy

Recovery From Schizophrenia: Psychiatry And Political Economy

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

334 NOTES103 Thara, “Gender differences in schizophrenia.”104 El-Islam, M.F., “A better outlook for schizophrenics living in extended families,”British Journal of <strong>Psychiatry</strong>, 135:343–7, 1979.105 Wig, N.N., Menon, D.K. and Bedi, H., “Coping with schizophrenic patients indeveloping countries: A study of expressed emotions in the relatives,” presented atthe Seventh World Congress of <strong>Psychiatry</strong>, Vienna, July 11–16, 1983; Leff,<strong>Psychiatry</strong> Around the Globe, p. 157.8THE PERSON WITH SCHIZOPHRENIA IN WESTERN SOCIETY1 Kraft, S. and Shulins, N., “Cardboard is home for box people,” Associated Pressrelease in the Boulder Daily Camera, January 17, 1982, p. 5.2 Hopper, K., Baxter, E. and Cox, S., “Not making it crazy: The young homelesspatients in New York City,” New Directions for Mental Health Services, no. 14: 33–42,1982.3 US Department of Health and Human Services, Toward a National Plan for theChronically Mentally Ill, Report to the Secretary by the Steering Committee on theChronically Mentally Ill, Washington, DC: Department of Health and HumanServices Publication Number (ADM) 81–1077, 1981, part 2, p. 11.4 Reich, R. and Siegel, L., “The emergence of the Bowery as a psychiatric dumpingground,” Psychiatric Quarterly, 50:191–201, 1978; Reich, R. and Siegel, L., “Thechronically mentally ill shuffle to oblivion,” Psychiatric Annals, 3:35–55, 1973.5 Spitzer, R.L., Cohen, G., Miller, D.J. and Endicott, J., “The psychiatric status of100 men on Skid Row,” International Journal of Social <strong>Psychiatry</strong>, 15:230–4, 1969.6 Baxter, E., and Hopper, K., “The new mendicancy: Homeless in New York City,”American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 52:393–408, 1982, p. 398.7 Ibid., pp. 398–400.8 Hopper, Baxter and Cox, “Not making it crazy,” p. 34.9 Priest, R.G., “A USA-UK comparison,” Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine,63:441–5, 1970.10 Bogue, D.J., Skid Row in American Cities, Chicago: Community and Family StudyCenter, University of Chicago, 1963, p. 208.11 Farr, R., unpublished manuscript, 1983.12 Torrey, E.F., “The real twilight zone,” Washington Post, August 26, 1983.13 Bassuk, E.L., Rubin, L. and Lauriat, A., “Is homelessness a mental health problem?”,American Journal of <strong>Psychiatry</strong>, 141:1546–50, 1984.14 Morse, G. and Calsyn, R., “Mentally disturbed homeless people in St. Louis:Needy, willing, but underserved,” Journal of Mental Health, 14:74–94, 1986.15 Colorado Bar Association, Report concerning the implementation of the ColoradoAct for the Care and Treatment of the Mentally 111, submitted to the Board ofGovernors of the Colorado Bar Association by the Disability Law Committee onJuly 31, 1981, p. 22.16 Spitzer, “The psychiatric status of 100 men on Skid Row;” Priest, “A USA-UKcomparison;” Baxter, “The new mendicancy;” Arce, A.A., Tadlock, M., Vergare,M.J. and Shapiro, S.H., “A psychiatric profile of street people admitted to anemergency shelter,” Hospital and Community <strong>Psychiatry</strong>, 34:812–17, 1983; Bassuk, “Is

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!