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Psychiatric Ill Health Following Physical Illness

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

Robert Kellner*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychological Medicine, University of Liverpool

Extract

The association of physical illness and psychiatric illness has been found by Doust (1952), Downes and Simon (1953), Hinkle and Woolf (1957) and others.

The present investigation was conducted in a general practice; the aim was to assess whether a physical illness could precipitate psychiatric ill health. The conditions in general practice appeared to be suitable for this investigation because patients can be observed before and after a physical illness.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1966 

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References

Doust, J. W. L. (1952). “Psychiatric aspects of somatic immunity.” Brit. J. soc. Med., 6, 49.Google Scholar
Downes, J., and Simon, K. (1953). “Characteristics of psychoneurotic patients and their families as revealed in a general morbidity study.” Psychosom. Med., 15, 463.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garrett, H. E. (1954). Statistics in Psychology and Education. p. 236. New York.Google Scholar
Hinkle, L. E., and Woolf, H. G. (1957). “Health and the social environment: Experimental investigations”, in Exploration in Social Psychiatry (ed. Leigh ton, A. H., Clausen, J. A., and Wilson, R. N.). London and New York.Google Scholar
Kellner, R. (1965). “The seasonal prevalence of neurosis.” Brit. J. Psychiat., 112, 69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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