Centre for the Social History of Health and Healthcare, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK.
Cult Med Psychiatry. 2021 Sep;45(3):385-404. doi: 10.1007/s11013-021-09751-4. Epub 2021 Sep 7.
In the spring of 1962, a series of alarming headlines greeted American newspaper readers. From "New York Living for Nuts Only" and "One in Five Here Mentally Fit" to "Scratch a New Yorker, and What Do You Find?" and "City Gets Mental Test, Results are Real Crazy," the stories highlighted the shocking and, to some, incredible statistics that fewer than one in five (18.5%) Manhattanites had good mental health. Approximately a quarter of them had such bad mental health that they were effectively incapacitated, often unable to work or function socially. The headlines were gleaned from Mental Health in the Metropolis (1962), the first major output of the Midtown Manhattan Study, a large-scale, interdisciplinary project that surveyed the mental health of 1660 white Upper East Side residents between the ages of 20 and 59. One of the most significant social psychiatry projects to emerge following the Second World War, the Midtown Manhattan Study endeavored to "test the general hypothesis that biosocial and sociocultural factors leave imprints on mental health which are discernible when viewed from the panoramic perspective provided by a large population." Despite initial media and academic interest, however, the Midtown Manhattan Study's findings were soon forgotten, as American psychiatry turned its focus to individual-rather than population-psychopathology, and turned to the brain-rather than the environment-for explanations. Relying on archival sources, contemporary medical and social scientific literature, and oral history interviews, this article explains why the Midtown Manhattan Study failed to become more influential, concluding that its emphasis on the role of social isolation and poverty in mental illness should be taken more seriously today.
1962 年春天,一系列令人震惊的头条新闻出现在美国报纸读者面前。从“纽约只靠坚果为生”“五分之一的纽约人心理健康”到“刮开一个纽约人,你会发现什么?”和“这座城市接受了精神测试,结果真的很疯狂”,这些故事突出了令人震惊的、对一些人来说难以置信的统计数据,即不到五分之一(18.5%)的曼哈顿人有良好的心理健康。大约四分之一的人心理健康状况极差,实际上丧失了能力,经常无法工作或无法正常社交。这些头条新闻取自《大都市的心理健康》(1962 年),这是中城曼哈顿研究的第一个主要成果,这是一个大规模的跨学科项目,调查了 1660 名年龄在 20 岁至 59 岁之间的白人上东区居民的心理健康状况。中城曼哈顿研究是二战后出现的最具影响力的社会精神病学项目之一,旨在“检验这样一个普遍假设,即生物社会和社会文化因素在心理健康上留下了印记,从大规模人口提供的全景视角来看,这些印记是可以识别的。”然而,尽管最初媒体和学术界都很感兴趣,但中城曼哈顿研究的发现很快就被遗忘了,因为美国精神病学将注意力转向了个体而不是群体的精神病理学,并将解释转向了大脑而不是环境。本文利用档案资料、当代医学和社会科学文献以及口述历史访谈,解释了为什么中城曼哈顿研究没有产生更大的影响,并得出结论,今天应该更加重视社会孤立和贫困在精神疾病中的作用。