Observations On the Relation of Psychosocial Factors To Psychiatric Illness Among Coal-Miners

Coal mining is one of the most hazardous of occup's. The miner's subterranean existence fills his lungs with bad air & his mind with frustrations & fears. Inadquate housing, limited community resources & soc isolation make up his supraterranean existence. The miner's soc e...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of social psychiatry 1957-10, Vol.3 (2), p.133-145
Hauptverfasser: Field, Lewis W., Ewing, Reed T., Wayne, David M.
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container_issue 2
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container_title International journal of social psychiatry
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creator Field, Lewis W.
Ewing, Reed T.
Wayne, David M.
description Coal mining is one of the most hazardous of occup's. The miner's subterranean existence fills his lungs with bad air & his mind with frustrations & fears. Inadquate housing, limited community resources & soc isolation make up his supraterranean existence. The miner's soc environment is more frustrating than rewarding. His soc outlets are extremely limited. Living & work conditions such as these are factors contributing to physical (silicosis) & emotional (anxiety-based smothering) suffocation. These observations are based on experiences gained in the operation of a mental health clinic in the coalmining regions of WVa. Several effects of threat to the adaptive mechanism are discussed. Mechanization has disrupted the soc cohesion of the work-team, with an increase in psychol'al stress. While it may have increased production, it has intensified psychol'al stress & increased psychiatric casualities. Other stress factors discussed are disrupting soc influences introduced from without as the result of changes in transportation & COMM's && an unstable, fluid, employment situation. Such a trapped, hopeless life situation is seen as requiring the use of certain mental mechanisms on the part of the miner: passive acceptance of his role, repression, & denial of fear & hostility. This defensive psychol'al structure is posited as helping to explain the miner's apparent apathy & his proneness to develop psycho-physiological symptoms. The miner's wife also develops psycho-physiological reactions, but her symptoms are seen as psychodynamically diff. While there is no direct physical threat on her life, there is the ever-present threat of losing her main source of her security (financial & emotional), her husband. What is needed to deal with there problems is a corps of group workers who can function as soc catalysts. Such trained workers could activate reacreational programs, & plant seeds for group cohesiveness & group identification. S. Schwartz.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/002076405700300207
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title Observations On the Relation of Psychosocial Factors To Psychiatric Illness Among Coal-Miners
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