Pols Hans
Unit for History and Philosophy of Science, University of Sydney, Australia.
Osiris. 2003;18:194-211. doi: 10.1086/649384.
American sociologists and psychiatrists have often characterized cities as sites of social disintegration conducive to insanity. Small-town rural life, by contrast, has been presented as ideally suited for fostering mental health. Early research in psychiatric epidemiology confirmed these views. After World War II, psychiatrists and sociologists collaborated in influential research projects on mental illness in the community. Although these studies were guided by theories of social stratification, which ignores location, cities remained problematic for psychiatrists because they contained high concentrations of poverty and social problems and, consequently, mental health problems.
美国社会学家和精神病学家常常将城市描述为有利于精神错乱的社会解体场所。相比之下,乡村小镇生活被描绘为极有利于促进心理健康。精神病流行病学的早期研究证实了这些观点。第二次世界大战后,精神病学家和社会学家合作开展了关于社区精神疾病的有影响力的研究项目。尽管这些研究受社会分层理论的指导,而该理论忽略了地理位置,但城市对精神病学家来说仍然存在问题,因为城市中贫困和社会问题高度集中,因此心理健康问题也很突出。