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The Prevalence of Nail-biting in Normal and Abnormal Populations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

Brian R. Ballinger*
Affiliation:
Dundee Psychiatric Service, Royal Dundee Liff Hospital, Liff, By Dundee

Extract

Many text-books of psychiatry include an inquiry about a history of nail-biting in their scheme of history taking, and if nail-biting is noted when a patient is examined it is often recorded.

Type
Abstract
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1970 

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References

Birch, L. B. (1955). ‘The incidence of nail-biting among school-children.’ British Journal of Educational Psychology, 25, 123–8.Google Scholar
Hill, J. M. (1946). ‘Nail-biting, incidence, allied personality traits and military significance.’ American Journal of Psychiatry, 103, 185–7.Google Scholar
Massler, M., and Malone, A. J. (1950). ‘Nail-biting, a Review.’ Journal of Paediatrics, 36, 523–31.Google Scholar
Pennington, L. A., (1945). ‘The incidence of nailbiting among adults.’ American Journal of Psychiatry, 102, 241–4.Google Scholar
Wechsler, D. (1931). ‘The incidence and significance of finger-nail biting in children.’ Psychoanalytic Review, 18, 201–09.Google Scholar
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