Barrabee, Paul and Otto von Mering: "Ethnic Variations in Mental Stress in Families with Psychotic Children", Chapter 9 in Mental Health and Mental Disorder, ( A. M. Rose, ed.). Any effort to generalize from this study must be cautioned by the following considerations: (a) these families did have psychotic children, although their ethnic characteristics may be generally representative of other families of the same ethnic identity; and (b) the Jewish families tended to be lower class, as opposed to the more typical middle class status of American Jewish families.
2.
Hollingshead, August B., and Redlich, Fredrick C.: Social Class and Mental Illness, A Community Study, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 1958 , p. 204, (table 12).
3.
Myers, Jerome K., and Roberts, Bertram H.: "Some Relationships Between Religion, Ethnic Origin and Mental Illness" in The Jews: Social Patterns of an American Group , ed. Marshall Sklare, The Free Press, Glencoe, Illinois, 1958, p. 554, (table 2).
4.
Ibid., (table 3).
5.
Opler, M.K.: "Cultural Differences in Mental Disorders: An Italian and Irish Contrast in the Schizophrenics—U.S.A." Chap. 19 in Culture and Mental Health , (ed. by M. K. Opler), Macmillan, 1959.
6.
Rose, Arnold M., and Holger, R. Stub: "Summary of Studies on the Incidence of Mental Disorders", Chap. 5 in Mental Health and Mental Disorder, (ed. A. M. Rose), W. W. Norton, 1955.
7.
Sanua, Victor D.: "Differences in Personality Adjustment Among Different Generations of American Jews and Non-Jews", Chap. 20 in Culture and Mental Health, (ed. by M. K. Opler), Macmillan , 1959.