Social disorder and diagnostic order: the US Mental Hygiene Movement, the Midtown Manhattan study and the development of psychiatric epidemiology in the 20th century

Int J Epidemiol. 2014 Aug;43 Suppl 1(Suppl 1):i29-42. doi: 10.1093/ije/dyu117. Epub 2014 Jul 15.

Abstract

Recent scholarship regarding psychiatric epidemiology has focused on shifting notions of mental disorders. In psychiatric epidemiology in the last decades of the 20th century and the first decade of the 21st century, mental disorders have been perceived and treated largely as discrete categories denoting an individual's mental functioning as either pathological or normal. In the USA, this grew partly out of evolving modern epidemiological work responding to the State's commitment to measure the national social and economic burdens of psychiatric disorders and subsequently to determine the need for mental health services and to survey these needs over time. Notably absent in these decades have been environmentally oriented approaches to cultivating normal, healthy mental states, approaches initially present after World War II. We focus here on a set of community studies conducted in the 1950s, particularly the Midtown Manhattan study, which grew out of a holistic conception of mental health that depended on social context and had a strong historical affiliation with: the Mental Hygiene Movement and the philosophy of its founder, Adolf Meyer; the epidemiological formation of field studies and population surveys beginning early in the 20th century, often with a health policy agenda; the recognition of increasing chronic disease in the USA; and the radical change in orientation within psychiatry around World War II. We place the Midtown Manhattan study in historical context--a complex narrative of social institutions, professional formation and scientific norms in psychiatry and epidemiology, and social welfare theory that begins during the Progressive era (1890-1920) in the USA.

Keywords: Psychiatry; community studies; health services; history; methods; psychiatric epidemiology; survey research.

Publication types

  • Historical Article
  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
  • Epidemiology / history*
  • Health Policy
  • History, 19th Century
  • History, 20th Century
  • History, 21st Century
  • Hospitals, Psychiatric / history
  • Mental Disorders / diagnosis
  • Mental Disorders / epidemiology
  • Mental Disorders / history*
  • Mental Health
  • Mental Health Services / history*
  • Mental Health Services / organization & administration
  • New York City
  • Psychiatry / history*
  • Research
  • United States