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  1. Drift hypothesis, concerning the relationship between mental illness and social class, is the argument that illness causes one to have a downward shift in social class.

  2. Apr 23, 2024 · The social drift hypothesis highlights the link between mental illness and social class. This means that individuals with mental health issues or disabilities often face financial challenges due to various factors.

  3. Jun 1, 2020 · We investigated whether associations between area deprivation, urbanicity and elevated risk of severe mental illnesses (SMIs, including schizophrenia and bipolar disorder) is accounted for by social drift or social causation.

    • Sze Chim Lee, Sze Chim Lee, Marcos DelPozo-Banos, Marcos DelPozo-Banos, Keith Lloyd, Keith Lloyd, Ia...
    • 2020
  4. May 25, 2016 · The social drift hypothesis suggests that the clinical features of psychotic disorders contribute to a gradual downward socioeconomic trajectory. Our understanding of the underlying causes linking schizophrenia to later deprivation remains, however, limited.

  5. The Drift Hypothesis posits that mental illness can inhibit socioeconomic attainment and. lead people to drift into the lower social class (Johnson, Cohen, Brook, & Dohrenw, 1999). While the universally acknowledged idea between the two is the Social Causation Hypothesis,

  6. Mar 15, 2018 · Conversely, the social selection/drift hypothesis proposes that people living with mental illness drift into poverty during the course of their lives, due to disability, reduced economic productivity, increased stigma and increased health expenditure caused by their illness.

  7. Feb 21, 2014 · The social causation hypothesis asserts that experiencing economic hardship increases the risk of subsequent mental illness. The selection/drift hypothesis posits that mental illness can inhibit socioeconomic attainment and lead people to drift into the lower social class or never escape poverty.

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