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      Social relationships during the onset and remission of neurotic symptoms. A prospective community study.

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          Abstract

          In a prospective study of a community sample, we examined changes in social relationships accompanying the onset and remission of neurotic symptoms. For those who developed symptoms in the course of 12 months, no decrease was found in the availability or reported adequacy of either close or diffuse ties, compared to those who remained symptom-free. For those having a remission, an increase in the adequacy of social relationships and a decrease in rows was observed only in those who improved later on, at the 12-month interview. But with either the onset or remission of symptoms, the availability of relationships remained unchanged. These observations cannot establish the direction of causality, but suggest that neurotic symptoms are more associated with the perception of social relationships than with the structure of personal networks.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Br J Psychiatry
          The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science
          Royal College of Psychiatrists
          0007-1250
          0007-1250
          Nov 1983
          : 143
          Article
          S0007125000200871
          10.1192/bjp.143.5.467
          6640215
          b093da05-9b8f-4d7e-b6b2-5460bc66c319
          History

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