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Environmental Factors in Depressive Illness

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

A. D. Forrest
Affiliation:
Royal Edinburgh Hospital, Morning side, and Department of Psychiatry, University of Edinburgh
R. G. Priest
Affiliation:
Royal Edinburgh Hospital, Morning side, and Department of Psychiatry, University of Edinburgh

Extract

There seems to be a series of conceptual problems regarding depressive illness and its classification. First, there is the problem of whether these illnesses have some biological function, whether they represent attempts on the part of human organisms to deal with or escape from situations of stress, or whether they should be thought of simply as psychologically meaningless events. Eysenck (1960) and Wolpe (1958) make it clear that they regard neurotic symptoms as meaningless, maladaptive patterns which can and should be removed by suggestion, deconditioning and behaviour therapy. Similarly, Mayer-Gross, Slater and Roth (1955) reject the suggestion that depressive illness may have an adaptive function. By contrast, clinical medicine, though resting heavily on the mechanistic causality models of physics and chemistry, does give some implicit recognition of biological purpose in physical illness. Thus, pneumonia represents not only the phenomenon of invasion of pulmonary tissue by infective agents, but also the phenomenon of bodily defence against such invasion. When such defence does not exist, the patient seldom gets to the physician in time to be diagnosed. That depressive illness might have an analogous biological function was suggested by Freud (1917) and elaborated in impressive detail by Lewis (1934). The converse view that depressive illness represents a breakdown in adaptive function is based on the views of Kraepelin (1913) who attributed the dominant place in the depressive group of illnesses to manic-depressive psychosis with its known hereditary basis. That hereditary factors do operate in the manic-depressive group proper seems to have been demonstrated more than adequately by Slater (1938) and Kallmann (1950). The evidence regarding other depressive reactions, whether recurrent or involutional, seems far from impressive. Nevertheless, Mayer-Gross et al. take the view that affective illness is primarily a question of constitution, that the content of the depression may be understandable in terms of the patient's life situation, but that the causes of breakdown given by relatives of patients are really symptoms of the oncoming illness. Interestingly enough, Henderson and Gillespie (1956) classify affective illness into manic-depressive and involutional depression, and note the importance of social factors (p. 276).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1965 

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