THE SOCIOLOGY OF MENTAL HEALTH AND ILLNESS
Sociology 642     
Fall 2002
Wednesdays 3:30-6:10 p.m.
Art-Sociology Building, Room 3217



Instructors:		Dr. Leonard I. Pearlin 
                    Dr. Melissa A. Milkie
Offices:		Room 4101 (Pearlin) & Room 4133 (Milkie)
Office Hours:		By appointment 
Telephones:		405-7706 (Pearlin) & 405-6428 (Milkie)
E-mail addresses:	lpearlin@socy.umd.edu & mmilkie@socy.umd.edu
Readings:		Assigned readings are available 1) in the C.W. Mills graduate loungeRoom 4118 Art-Sociology and 2) outside of Room 4133 Art-Sociology.


Course Description:

The interests of many disciplines converge around issues of mental health and psychological disorder: epidemiology, psychology and psychiatry, various neurosciences, and immunology --- to mention a few.  The sociology of mental health is uniquely different from the orientations of other disciplines in that it seeks (1) to identify the social conditions that affect psychological well-being and (2) to describe the processes linking the social conditions to their psychological effects.  The dual aims of this course are to provide both the theoretical foundations appropriate to the study of societal effects on individuals well-being and a familiarity with relevant research.

The course will begin with a consideration of issues that serve as background to what will follow.  Specifically, we shall consider the social meaning of the constructs of mental health and mental disorder and examine some of the major diagnostic categories of disorder.  Part of this examination entails a review of the epidemiology of mental illness, including the distribution of disorder, measurement issues and issues of causation.

Next, we shall identify and discuss some of the psychological and sociological models used to explain disorder, including mediating and moderating conditions (e.g., coping, social support and self-concept).  Well explore life course perspectives, which examine how the stress process and the stressors to which people are exposed may change over the life course.  Particular emphasis will be given to what is referred to as the stress process model. 

With the stress process model providing the conceptual framework, we shall explore the contributions of systems of inequality to mental disorders.  These systems include social and economic class locations, race/ethnicity and gender.  Related to these systems, but of importance in their own right, are the community and neighborhood contexts in which people live and the structure of the social networks of which they are a part. 

Finally, following these subjects, we shall focus on the social and institutional roles of people as they relate to mental health and illness, particularly within family and occupation.

 Course Requirements:

1. Attendance and participation are essential.  This entails completing all assigned reading prior to class.  It is our expectation that students enter the classroom each week with a good basic understanding of all assigned reading.  You are also expected to bring thoughtful questions that serve as starting points for discussion.  All must actively contribute to seminar discussions.

Class participation accounts for 30% of your course grade.

Structured assignments and in-class presentations may be introduced throughout the semester.

2. A research paper, no more than 30 pages in length, is required for the seminar and its quality accounts for 70% of your course grade.  The substance of this paper will be of the students choice, but will be relevant to the broad concerns of the sociology of mental health.

Students may confer with the instructors about their papers at any time.  However, all will be required to present a detailed outline of their paper to the class near mid-semester, on October 30.  This presentation will include a clear and concise statement of goals, a thorough review of the relevant literatures, and the major themes you plan to develop.  An annotated bibliography is due in class October 30.

***Research papers are due on December 11 in class*** You will make an in-class presentation of your paper on this date as well.

Other Notes:

Guest speakers may occasionally be invited to class.

Additional readings may be added to particular sections of the course.

SOCIOLOGY 642: THE SOCIOLOGY OF MENTAL HEALTH AND ILLNESS
Course Outline and Scheduled Readings
_________________________________________________________________________________
Sept. 4 (Week 1)	Introduction to the Sociology of Mental Health and Illness
_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
Sept. 11 (Week 2)	Overview: Positive Mental Health and Social Construction of Mental Illness
_________________________________________________________________________________

Aneshensel, CS and JE Phelan. 1999. The Sociology of Mental Health: Surveying the Field. Pp. 3-17 in CS Aneshensel and JC Phelan (Eds.) Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health. New York: Plenum.

Wheaton, B. 2001. The Role of Sociology in the Study of Mental Health...and the Role of Mental Health in the Study of Sociology. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 42:221-34.

Jahoda, M. 1958. Pp. ix-xiii; 10-64 in Current Conceptions of Positive Mental Health. New York: Basic Books.

Horwitz, AV. 2002. Excerpts from Creating Mental Illness. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Link, B and JC Phelan. 1999. Labeling and Stigma. Pp. 481-94 in CS Aneshensel and JC Phelan (Eds.) Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health. New York: Plenum.

Rosenberg, M. 1992. Pp. 31-54 in The Unread Mind: Unraveling the Mysteries of Madness. New York: Lexington Books.
_________________________________________________________________________________
Sept. 18 (Week 3)	The Diagnosis and Epidemiology of Psychiatric Disorder: The Social
                    Distribution of Disorder & Measurement Issues
_________________________________________________________________________________

Eaton, WW. 2001. The Social Epidemiology of Mental Disorders. In WW Eaton (Ed.) The Sociology of Mental Disorders, 3rd edition. New York: Praeger.

Kessler, R and S Zhao. 1999. Overview of Descriptive Epidemiology of Mental Disorders. Pp. 127-150 in CS Aneshensel and JC Phelan (Eds.) Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health. New York: Plenum.

American Psychiatric Association, Washington, DC. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th edition (DSM-IV) (Pp. xv-xxv; 320-49). (We have assigned some introductory material as well as an example of how the manual is used in diagnosing disorder, in this case depression. Students may want to look through the book and familiarize themselves with its structure and contents.).

Scott, WJ. 1990. PTSD in DSM-III: A Case in the Politics of Diagnosis and Disease. Social Problems 37:294-310.

Loring, M and B Powell. 1988. Gender, Race, and DSM-III: A Study of the Objectivity of Psychiatric Behavior. The Journal of Health and Social Behavior 29:1-22.

_________________________________________________________________________________
Sept. 25 (Week 4)	The Diagnosis and Epidemiology of Psychiatric Disorder (cont):
                     Measurement Issues & Analysis of Causation
_________________________________________________________________________________
       
Horwitz, AV. 2002. Outcomes in the Sociology of Mental Health and Illness: Where Have We Been and Where are We Going? The Journal of Health and Social Behavior 43:143-51.

Kessler, RC. 2002. The Categorical versus Dimensional Assessment Controversy in the Sociology of Mental Illness. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 43:171-88.

J Mirowsky and CE Ross. 2002. Measurement for a Human Science.  Journal of Health and Social Behavior 43:152-70.

Aneshensel, CS. 2002. Commentary: Answers and Questions in the Sociology of Mental Health.  Journal of Health and Social Behavior 43:236-46.

Dohrenwend, BP, I Levav, PE Shrout, S Schwartz, G Naveh, BG Link, AE Skodol and A Stueve. 1992. Socioeconomic Status and Psychiatric Disorders: The Causation-Selection Issue. Science 255:946-52.
_________________________________________________________________________________
Oct. 2 (Week 5)	Cognitive Perspectives and Life Events Models
_________________________________________________________________________________

Lazarus, RS and S Folkman. 1984. Chapter 1: The Stress Concept in the Life Sciences. In Lazarus, RS and S Folkman (Eds.) Stress, Appraisal, and Coping. New York: Springer.

Lazarus, RS and S Folkman. 1984. Chapter 2: Cognitive Appraisal Processes. In Lazarus RS and S Folkman (Eds.) Stress, Appraisal, and Coping. New York: Springer.

Lazarus, RS and S Folkman. 1984. Chapters 3-6 in Lazarus, RS and S Folkman (Eds.) Stress, Appraisal, and Coping. New York: Springer.

Perkins, DV. 1982. The Assessment of Stress Using Life Events Scales. Pp. 320-31 in L Goldberger and S Breznitz (Eds.) Handbook of Stress. New York: The Free Press.

McLean, ED and BG Link. 1994. Unraveling Complexity: Strategies to Refine Concepts, Measures and Research Designs in the Study of Life Events and Mental Health. Pp. 15-42 in WR Avison and IH Gotlib (Eds.) Stress and Mental Health: Contemporary Issues and Prospects for the Future. New York: Plenum       	


_________________________________________________________________________________
Oct. 9 (Week 6)	Perspectives on Stress and Disorder:  Stress Process Models
_________________________________________________________________________________

Horwitz, AV. 1999. The Sociological Study of Mental Illness: A Critique and Synthesis of Four Perspectives. Pp. 57-78 in CS Aneshensel and JC Phelan (Eds.) Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health. New York: Plenum.

Pearlin, LI.  1999.  The Stress Process Revisited: Reflections on Concepts and Their Interrelationships. Pp. 395-415 in CS Aneshensel and JC Phelan (Eds.) Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health. New York: Plenum. 

Pearlin, LI, CS Aneshensel, and AJ LeBlanc. 1997. The Forms and Mechanisms of Stress Proliferation: The Case of AIDS Caregivers. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 38:223-36.

Wheaton, B. 1999. Social Stress. Pp. 277-300 in CS Aneshensel and JC Phelan (Eds.) Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health. New York: Plenum.
_____________________________________________________________________________
Oct. 16 (Week 7)	The Moderators & Mediators of the Stress Process: Social Support, Coping & the
                     Self-Concept
_________________________________________________________________________________

House, JS, KR Landis and D Umberson. 1988. Social Relationships and Health. Science 241:540-545.

RJ Turner and JB Turner. 1999. Social Integration and Support. Pp. 301-20 in CS Aneshensel and JC Phelan (Eds.) Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health. New York: Plenum. 

Pearlin, LI and ME McCall. 1990. Occupational Stress and Marital Support: A Description of Microprocesses. Pp. 39-60 in J Eckenrode and S Gore (Eds.) Stress Between Work and Family. New York: Plenum Press.

Sarason, IG, GR Pierce and BR Sarason. 1994. General and Specific Perceptions of Social Support.  Pp. 151-77 in WR Avison and IH Gotlib (Eds.) Stress and Mental Health: Contemporary Issues and Prospects for the Future. New York: Plenum.

Pearlin, LI and M Pioli. 2002. Personal Control: Some Conceptual Turf and Future Directions. In LI Pearlin, S Zarit, and KW Schaie (Eds.) Societal Impacts on Personal Control in the Elderly. New York: Springer.

Rosenberg, M and BC McCullough. 1981. Mattering: Inferred Significance and Mental Health Among Adolescents. Pp. 163-82 in RG Simmons (Ed.) Research in Community and Mental Health: A Research Annual. New York: JAI Press, Inc.

_________________________________________________________________________________
Oct. 23 (Week 8)	Life Course Perspectives on Mental Health
_________________________________________________________________________________

Pearlin, LI and MM Skaff. 1996. Stress and the Life Course: A Paradigmatic Alliance. The Gerontologist 36:239-47. 

George, LK. 1999. Life Course Perspectives on Mental Health. Pp. 565-84 in CS Aneshensel and JC Phelan (Eds.) Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health. New York: Plenum.

Miech, RA and MJ Shanahan. 2000. Socioeconomic Status and Depression Over the Life Course. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 41:162-76.

McLeod, JD and MJ Shanahan. 1996. Trajectories of Poverty and Children's Mental Health. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 37:207-20.

Harker, K. 2001. Immigrant Generation, Assimilation, and Adolescent Well-Being. Social Forces 79:969-1004.

Moen, P. 1997. Womens Roles and Resilience: Trajectories of Advantage or Turning Points? Pp 133-56 in IH Gotlib and B Wheaton (Eds.) Stress and Adversity over the Life Course: Trajectories and Turning Points. Cambridge University Press.
_________________________________________________________________________________
Oct. 30 (Week 9)	In-Class Presentations: Papers in Progress; Annotated Bibliography Due
_________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________
Nov. 6 (Week 10)	Social Structure, Inequality and Mental Health:  Socioeconomic Status
_________________________________________________________________________________

McLeod, JD, and JM Nonnemaker. 1999. Social Stratification and Inequality. Pp. 321-44 in CS Aneshensel and JC Phelan (Eds.) Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health. New York: Plenum. 
                    
McLeod JD, and RC Kessler. 1990. Socioeconomic Status Differences in Vulnerability to Undesirable Life Events. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 31:162-72.

Kessler, RC, and P Cleary. 1980. Social Class and Psychological Distress. American Sociological Review 45:463-78.

Bruce, ML, D Takeuchi, and PJ Leaf. 1991. Poverty and Psychiatric Status. Archives of General Psychiatry 48:470-74.

Aneshensel, CS and C Sucoff. 1996. The Neighborhood Context of Adolescent Mental Health. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 37:293-310.

Ross, CE, JR Reynolds and KJ Geis. 2000. The Contingent Meaning of Neighborhood Stability for Residents Psychological Well-Being. American Sociological Review 65:581-97.

_________________________________________________________________________________
Nov. 13 (Week 11)	Social Structure, Inequality and Mental Health: Race/Ethnicity
_________________________________________________________________________________

Jones, JM. 1992. Understanding the Mental Health Consequences of Race: Contributions of Basic Social Psychological Processes. Pp. 149-240 in JM Jones The Social Psychology of Mental Health.  New York: Guilford Press.

Williams, DR, DT Takeuchi, and RK Adair 1992. Socioeconomic Status and Psychiatric Disorder Among Blacks and Whites. Social Forces 71:179-94.

Williams, DR and C Collins. 1995. US Socioeconomic and Racial Differences in Health: Patterns and Explanations. Annual Review of Sociology 21:349-86.

Vega, WA and RG Rumbaut. 1991. Ethnic Minorities and Mental Health. Annual Review of Sociology 17:351-83.

McLeod, JD and JM Nonnemaker. 2000. Poverty and Child Emotional and Behavioral Problems: Racial/Ethnic Differences in Processes and Effects. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 41:137-61.

Schulz, A, D Williams, B Israel, A Becker, E Parker, SA James and J Jackson. 2000. Unfair Treatment, Neighborhood Effects, and Mental Health in the Detroit Metropolitan Area. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 41:314-32.
_________________________________________________________________________________
Nov. 20 (Week 12)	Social Structure, Inequality, and Mental Health: Gender
_________________________________________________________________________________

Aneshensel, CS, CM Rutter, and PA Lanchenbruch. 1991. Social Structure, Stress, and Mental Health: Competing Conceptual and Analytic Models. American Sociological Review 56:166-78.

Mirowsky, J and CE Ross. 1995. Sex Differences in Distress: Real or Artifact? American Sociological Review 60:449-68.

Rosenfield, S. 1999. Splitting the Difference: Gender, the Self, and Mental Health. Pp. 209-24 in CS Aneshensel and JC Phelan (Eds.) Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health. New York: Plenum. 

Umberson, D, MD Chen, JS House, K Hopkins, and E Slaten. 1996. The Effect of Social Relationships on Psychological Well-Being: Are Men and Women Really So Different? Journal of Health and Social Behavior 41:137-61.

Bird, CE and AM Freemont. 1991. Gender, Time Use and Health. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 32:114-29.

Simon, R. 2002. Revisiting the Relationships among Gender, Marital Status, and Mental Health. American Journal of Sociology 107:1065-96.

_________________________________________________________________________________
Nov. 27 (Week 13)	Institutional Roles and Stress: Family _________________________________________________________________________________

Pearlin, LI. 1983. Role Strains and Personal Stress. Pp. 3-32 in HB Kaplan (Ed.) Psychosocial Stress. New York: Academic Press.

Pearlin, LI and H Turner. 1987. The Family as a Context of the Stress Process. Pp. 143-65 in SV Kasl and C Cooper (Eds.) Stress and Health: Issues in Research Methodology. Chichester, NY: Wiley.

Avison, WR. 1996. Family Structure and Mental Health. Unpublished paper from NIMH Conference.

Umberson, D and K Williams. 1999. Family Status and Mental Health. Pp. 225-54 in CS Aneshensel and JC Phelan (Eds.) Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health. New York: Plenum. 

Wheaton, B. 1990. Life Transitions, Role Histories, and Mental Health. American Sociological Review 55:209-23.

Horwitz, AV, J McLaughlin and HR White. 1998. How the Negative and Positive Aspects of Partner Relationships Affect the Mental Health of Young Married People. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 39:124-36.
_________________________________________________________________________________
Dec. 4 (Week 14)	Institutional Roles and Stress: Work
_________________________________________________________________________________

Holt, RR. 1982. Occupational Stress. Pp. 419-44 in L Goldberger and S Breznitz (Eds.) Handbook of Stress. New York: The Free Press.

Tausig, M. 1999. Work and Mental Health. Pp. 255-74 in CS Aneshensel and JC Phelan (Eds.) Handbook of the Sociology of Mental Health. New York: Plenum. 

Wheaton, B. 1990. Where Work and Family Meet: Stress Across Social Roles. Pp. 153-74 in J Eckenrode and S Gore (Eds.) Stress Between Work and Family. New York: Plenum Press.

Menaghan, E. 1994. The Daily Grind: Work Stressors, Family Patterns, and Intergenerational Outcomes. Pp. 115-47 in WR Avison and IH Gotlib (Eds.) Stress and Mental Health: Contemporary Issues and Prospects for the Future. New York: Plenum Press.

Hamilton, VL, CL Broman, WS Hoffman and DS Renner. 1990. Hard Times and Vulnerable People: Initial Effects of Plant Closing on Autoworkers' Mental Health. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 31:123-40.

Hamilton, VL, WS Hoffman, CL Broman and D Rauma. 1993. Unemployment, Distress, and Coping: A Panel Study of Autoworkers. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 65:234-47.

_________________________________________________________________________________
Dec. 11 (Week 15)	In-Class Presentations of Final Papers; Final Papers Due
_________________________________________________________________________________

8


