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A follow-up study of war neuroses.Improvement since separation from service.

A follow-up study of war neuroses.: Improvement since separation from service. Since the vast majority of the men in this study who were not ill at discharge maintained their status or improved further after separation from service, the analysis here is confined to those whom examiners regarded as ill at separation. Among them 24 percent remained the same, 62 percent improved, and 14 percent became worse. Interest here centers upon the identity of those whom examiners classified as either improved, or still ill, or even worse, and the problem is, as before, approached on the basis of observations at all three periods in the life histories of the subjects. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved) http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png

A follow-up study of war neuroses.Improvement since separation from service.

American Psychological Association — Apr 11, 2005

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Publisher
US Government Printing Office
Copyright
Copyright © 1955 American Psychological Association
Pages
193 –197
DOI
10.1037/10665-009
Publisher site
See Chapter on Publisher Site

Abstract

Since the vast majority of the men in this study who were not ill at discharge maintained their status or improved further after separation from service, the analysis here is confined to those whom examiners regarded as ill at separation. Among them 24 percent remained the same, 62 percent improved, and 14 percent became worse. Interest here centers upon the identity of those whom examiners classified as either improved, or still ill, or even worse, and the problem is, as before, approached on the basis of observations at all three periods in the life histories of the subjects. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)

Published: Apr 11, 2005

Keywords: separation from service; improvement; mental disorders

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