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Epidemiologists with an interest in bronchial asthma, have given little attention to the psychiatric aspects of this condition, particularly as it occurs in childhood. Clinical impressions, rather than the results of systematic studies, are responsible for the fact that some paediatricians and psychiatrists have come to view the personality of the asthmatic child in terms of a stereotype engendered by a particular type of mother-child relationship (Abramson, 1954). Moreover, there is a general belief that asthmatic children are neurotic and that this neurosis is manifest in their general behaviour, but in fact there is conflicting evidence on this point (Harris and Shure, 1956; Leigh and Marley, in press) and no definitive information is available. Children corres-ponding to this stereotype, over-dependent on their over-protective mothers, anxious, tense, shy, afraid to show their emotions, yet at the same time intelli-gent, ambitious, and perfectionist, are not un-common, but the evidence for the stereotype is
Graham et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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