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INCIDENCE AND FUTURE EXPECTANCY OF MENTAL DISEASE

JAMA. 1939;112(2):146-147. doi:10.1001/jama.1939.02800020052014.
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Not only the present incidence of mental disease is a problem of major proportions but also that occasioned by the future expectancy of this condition. Modern civilization has led to an increasing urbanization of the population. The belief is prevalent that there has been an alarming increase in mental disease in recent years and that this increase is in a measure attributable to the stress and strain of urban environment.

Dorn1 points out that the problem of measurement of the incidence of mental disease is complex, since there is no sharp line of demarcation between normality and abnormality. Even though there is a definite physical basis for many mental disorders, mental disease is fundamentally a cultural concept which varies with different groups. Many persons who might merely be considered eccentric in a rural district would be unable to cope with the exigencies of an urban environment and might even

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