1. Status Inconsistency and Psychiatric Diagnosis: A Structural Approach to Labeling Theory.
- Author
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Baldwin, Beverly Ann, Floyd Jr., H. Hugh, and McSeveney, Dennis R.
- Subjects
SOCIAL status ,STATUS inconsistency ,PSYCHIATRIC diagnosis ,SOCIAL indicators ,PSYCHOTHERAPY patients ,EMPLOYMENT ,SOCIALIZATION - Abstract
This study was undertaken to examine the relationship between status indicators and psychiatric diagnosis. The basic assumption tested was that information such as the patient's status inconsistency (which is related to role conflict), achieved status, and ascribed status are used in establishing the psychiatric disposition of the patient. The principal hypothesis tested was that patients with high status inconsistency would receive the more severe diagnoses (i.e., psychotic) while those with low status inconsistency would receive the less severe diagnoses (i.e., non-psychotic). It was found that the status inconsistency of the patients yielded the least explanatory power regarding diagnosis. In contrast, employment, occupation, age, and sex all proffer a moderate amount of explanation. The single most powerful predictor variable was the race of the patient. Our conclusion was that both primary and secondary socialization of the agents for diagnosis (psychiatrists) affected this socially constructed outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1975
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