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New Data on Marriage and Mental Disease: The Incidence of Psychoses in the Widowed and the Divorced

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2018

Ørnulv Ødegård*
Affiliation:
Gaustad Mental Hospital; University of Oslo, Norway
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It may be regarded as an established fact that the incidence of mental disorder is much higher in the single than in the married. In a previous paper two possible explanations were discussed: 1. There is a selection by marriage, whereby individuals who are personally and socially handicapped tend to remain single. Among such possible marriage handicaps there are certain personality traits which correlate markedly with a predisposition towards certain forms of mental disease, in particular schizophrenia.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1953 

References

Dayton, Neil A., “Marriage and Mental Disease,” New Engl. Journ. of Med., 1936, 215.Google Scholar
Idem, New Facts on Mental Disorder, 1939. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Essen-Møller, E., Untersuchungen über die Fruchtbarkeit gewisser Gruppen von Geisteskranken, 1935. Lund.Google Scholar
Landis, Carney, and Page, James D., Modern Society and Mental Disease, 1938. New York.Google Scholar
Ødegård, Ørnulv, “The Distribution of Mental Disease in Norway,” Acta Psychiatrica, 1945, 20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Idem , “Marriage and Mental Disease: A Study in Social Psychopathology,” Journ. Ment. Sci., 1946, 92.Google Scholar
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