A Race Riot's Effect on Psychological Symptoms
- 1 September 1975
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of General Psychiatry
- Vol. 32 (9) , 1189-1195
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archpsyc.1975.01760270121017
Abstract
• Certain individually stressful events have been observed to increase the psychological distress of persons affected; reduced psychological distress following other events has been attributed to collective processes, including increased group cohesion. These possibilities are investigated by contrasting reported symptom levels of 938 adults interviewed before, during, and after a racial riot. White suburbanites interviewed after the riot and urban black women interviewed during the riot report significantly fewer psychological symptoms. Hypotheses of seasonal symptom changes, sampling biases, and the absence of symptom changes among relatively unimpaired respondents are rejected, suggesting that reductions in symptom level are associated with the riot. Serious methodological problems are raised by our finding that such events may substantially affect not only rates but also patterns of reported psychological symptoms obtained through epidemiological studies.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Causes of Racial Disorders: A Grievance-Level ExplanationAmerican Sociological Review, 1973
- Depressive Illness and Aggression in BelfastBMJ, 1972
- The Cost of Commotion: An Analysis of the Psychiatric Sequelae of the 1969 Belfast RiotsThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1971
- LIFE EVENTS AND PSYCHIATRIC IMPAIRMENTJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 1971
- Psychiatric Sequelae of the Belfast RiotsThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1971
- Psychiatric Symptoms in Community, Clinic, and Mental Hospital GroupsAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1970
- Violence and Grievances: Reflections on the 1960s RiotsJournal of Social Issues, 1970
- Violence Next DoorSocial Forces, 1968
- Cognitive, social, and physiological determinants of emotional state.Psychological Review, 1962
- The Influence of the War on Mental Disease: A Psychiatric StudyJournal of Mental Science, 1941