Cairns E
Psychology Department, University of Ulster, Northern Ireland.
Int J Soc Psychiatry. 1989 Autumn;35(3):231-6. doi: 10.1177/002076408903500303.
The present study sought to evaluate the completing claims of the social stress hypothesis and the social selection hypothesis which both claim to explain the relationship between social class and psychopathology. Scores on a self-report measure of psychological wellbeing, the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ) were obtained from a random sample of 581 respondents in Northern Ireland. An analysis of variance comparing majority (Protestant) and minority (Catholic) group males and females at three socioeconomic levels produced a Religion X Social Status interaction. This was due to a trend of increasing symptoms with decreasing social status among Protestants and the reverse phenomenon among Catholics. It was concluded that the results while similar to those reported earlier by Cochrane and Stopes-Roe, provided no clear support for either the social selection hypothesis or the social stress hypothesis but were possibly related to local factors connected with emigration or the ongoing political violence in Northern Ireland.
本研究旨在评估社会压力假说和社会选择假说的完整性主张,这两种假说都声称能够解释社会阶层与精神病理学之间的关系。通过对北爱尔兰581名随机抽样受访者进行的心理健康自我报告测量——一般健康问卷(GHQ),获得了相关分数。对三个社会经济水平上的多数群体(新教徒)和少数群体(天主教徒)的男性和女性进行方差分析,结果产生了宗教×社会地位的交互作用。这是由于新教徒中症状随着社会地位降低而增加的趋势,以及天主教徒中相反的现象。研究得出结论,虽然这些结果与科克伦和斯托普斯 - 罗伊早期报告的结果相似,但没有为社会选择假说或社会压力假说提供明确支持,而是可能与北爱尔兰与移民相关的当地因素或持续的政治暴力有关。