PMID: 7370907Apr 1, 1980Paper

Social responsiveness toward mental patients: the general public and others

Canadian Journal of Psychiatry. Revue Canadienne De Psychiatrie
S Page

Abstract

The present study investigated the social responsiveness of the general public, and of psychiatric hospital staff, using Milgram's (1969) lost-letter technique. The public did not return fewer (or more) letters believed to be addressed to mental patients. Highest return rates were observed when personal costs to the finder were negligible. Psychiatric staff returned significantly fewer letters than did the general public. Other research, and implications of the findings, are outlined.

References

Jan 19, 1973·Science·D L Rosenhan
Apr 1, 1973·Archives of General Psychiatry·W R Gove, T Fain
Jun 1, 1973·Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology·A M Graziano, R S Fink
Dec 1, 1973·Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology·A FarinaL A Boudreau
Feb 1, 1974·Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology·E J Langer, R P Abelson
Oct 1, 1970·Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology·T R Sarbin, J C Mancuso

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Citations

Sep 21, 2005·European Psychiatry : the Journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists·Nicolas RüschPatrick W Corrigan
Sep 15, 1998·Journal of Homosexuality·S Page

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