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STUDIES IN HUMAN ECOLOGY Factors Relevant to the Occurrence of Bodily Illness and Disturbances in Mood, Thought and Behavior in Three Homogeneous Population Groups
LAWRENCE E. HINKLE; NORMAN PLUMMER; RHODA METRAUX; PETER RICHTER; JOHN W. GITTINGER; WILLIAM N. THETFORD; ADRIAN M. OSTFELD; FRANCIS D. KANE; LEO GOLDBERGER; WILLIAM E. MITCHELL; HOPE LEICHTER; RUTH PINSKY; DAVID GOEBEL; IRWIN D. J. BROSS; HAROLD G. WOLFF
Am J Psychiatry 1957;114:212-220.
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The Study Program in Human Health and the Ecology of Man of the Departments of Medicine and Psychiatry, New York Hospital—Cornell Medical Center, New York, N. Y.
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Abstract
Our inferences from our studies are these: man's relation to his social environment as perceived by him has a profound effect upon his general health. It influences the development and progression of all forms of illness, regardless of their nature, and regardless of the influence of other etiological factors. Its effect often far outweighs the influence of changes in the physical environment and the effects of random exposure to pathogenic or noxious agents. As a group, those who are experiencing difficulty in adapting to their social environment have a disproportionate amount of all of the illness which occurs among the adult population.Abstract Teaser
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