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A Study of Psychiatric Illness in Coal Miners

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2018

Felix Post*
Affiliation:
Jordanburn Nerve Hospital, Edinburgh

Extract

In recent years the mining industry as well as the miner himself have to an increasing extent become subjects for public discussion. In addition to problems of mechanization and industrial organization, the importance of the human element has found growing recognition, and an investigation into psychiatric disorders occurring in miners should form a useful contribution in this field.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1946 

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References

Literature

Coombes, B. L. (1945), Miner's Day. Penguin Special.Google Scholar
Dickson, D. Elliot (1936), “The Morbid Miner,” Edin. Med. J., 43, 696.Google Scholar
Fisher, S. W. (1944), “Health Hazards of Coalmining,” Brit. J. Industr. Med., 1, 153.Google Scholar
Halliday, J. L. (1938), “The Rising Incidence of Psychosomatic Illness,” Brit. Med. J., 2, 11.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Idem (1943), “Dangerous Occupation; Psychosomatic Illness; and Morale,” Psychosom. Med., 5, 71.Google Scholar
Redmayne, Richard A. S. Sir (1945), The Problem of the Coal Miner. London: Eyre & Spottiswoode.Google Scholar
Report of Morbidity Statistics of the Insured Population of Scotland (1935). H.M. Stationery Office.Google Scholar
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