Neighbors H W
Department of Health Behavior and Health Education, School of Public Health, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48109-2029.
Milbank Q. 1987;65 Suppl 2:348-80.
The ideology of the community mental health movement in the 1960s--that psychological distress among black Americans could be prevented if policies moved away from clinical models to a focus on social-structural change--still has much to offer. Agendas for both epidemiologic and intervention research will have to address the antecedents of psychopathology and assess the strategies of adjustment to social mobility and expectancy problems. Long-term preventive programs aimed at preschool and elementary school and at job training offer the greatest promise.