Author:
Birtchnell John,Masters Nigel,Deahl Martin
Abstract
A depression-screening instrument (DSI) was administered to all 25–34-year-old, British-born, married women registered with a health centre on a south-east London housing estate. A disproportionate number of high scorers lived in those dwellings with the highest disadvantagement score. The dwelling interiors of the high DSI scorers were significantly poorer in appearance compared with those of the low scorers. Significantly more of the high scorers (and of their husbands) described the estate as unpleasant, and bad for their children. They raised significantly more objections to other residents' (including children's) behaviour. Their complaints were only partly explicable in terms of their less favourable accommodation.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Reference40 articles.
1. Incidence of neurosis in a new housing estate;Martin;British Journal of Preventive and Social Medicine,1957
2. A Short Clinical Diagnostic Self-rating Scale for Psychoneurotic Patients
Cited by
45 articles.
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