Personal history & health : the Midtown Longitudinal Study, 1954-1974

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Personal history & health : the Midtown Longitudinal Study, 1954-1974

Leo Srole, Ernest Joel Millman

Transaction Publishers, c1998

Search this Book/Journal

Note

***遡及データをもとにした流用入力である

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Scientists, philosophers, and storytellers often question why human beings appear to remain constant while existing in a state of change at the same tune. Among those who explore and expose dramatic conflicts between human stability and flux, the number of behavioral scientists has remained relatively low - that is, until Leo Srole followed the progress of a large cohort of people in his Midtown Longitudinal Study. This statistical project was designed to analyze mental health and assess human biological, social, and psychological change. New York's Upper East Side was the study's focus, a sociologically insular community, consisting of loosely differentiated neighborhoods, with a population of generalizable significance that transcended individual characteristics. Midtowners, studied hi 1954 then reinterviewed in 1974, were the subjects of analysis. After a twenty-year hiatus, Srole's eagerly awaited findings and outcomes are available.Personal History and Health by Ernest Joel Millman is a posthumous synthesis of Leo Srole's seminal behavioral study. This book presents the principal findings of MLS - with emphasis on adult mental health predictors, not cause-and-effect relationships. Srole used such biophysical correlates as gender and generation, mental health and history of somatic disorders, and the statistical methods of multiple correlation and regression analysis to predict average mental health. Through this work, Srole's pioneering exploration of social age and adult mental health - in particular how they differed for the women and men of the Midtown Longitudinal Study - has been completed. Personal History and Health is the conclusive, long-range view of those changes.These are Srole's final perspectives on mental health. As was characteristic of him, it is not exploratory or confirmatory, nor does it declare conclusions; rather, it raises questions. Millman offers an accessible yet sophisticated presentation of sociomedical sampling and analysis in language which may be understood by statistically unsophisticated readers, placing all of the explanations, details, figures, and tables in comprehensive statistical appendices. This book will appeal to those in the mental health field, sociomedical scientists, and those with interest in the socioeconomic correlates of health status and/or social mobility in urban society.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction 2. Midtowners Lost and Found: Search and Assessment-Tactics and Results (with Anita K. Fischer, Renee Biel) 3. Demographic Aspects of Mental Health 4. Biosocial Antecedents of Mental Health 5. Early Life Experiences and Sociodemographic Background 6. The Midtown Longitudinal Study Panel's Mental Health from 1954 to 1974 7. The Midtown Longitudinal Study of Mental Health Treatment 8. Other Aspects of Change in Adult Health from 1954 to 1974 9. Predictions of Mental Health from Personal History Derived from the MHIM2: Expected versus Observed

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

Page Top