Psychiatric Beginnings: Moral Treatment and the Asylum.

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Psychiatric Beginnings: Moral Treatment and the Asylum
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Transcript of Psychiatric Beginnings: Moral Treatment and the Asylum.

Page 1: Psychiatric Beginnings: Moral Treatment and the Asylum.

Psychiatric Beginnings:

Moral Treatment and the Asylum

Page 2: Psychiatric Beginnings: Moral Treatment and the Asylum.

Further Reading on Early ModernConceptions of Madness

• William L. Parry-Jones ,The Trade in Lunacy (about private mad-houses)

• Michael V. DePorte Nightmares and Hobbyhorses (on literary elite responses to madness).

• Ida Macalpine and Richard Hunter, Three Hundred Years of Psychiatry

• Andrew Scull, Madhouses, Mad-Doctors and Madmen (1981)

• Vieda Skultans, English Madness: Ideas on Insanity, 1580-1890

• Michael Mac Donald, Mystical Bedlam: Madness, Anxiety and Healing in 17th England

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James Otis

Osgood’s Farm, Andover, MAwhere Otis was cared for in 1780s

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Bethlem Hospital at Moorfields in 1675

designed by natural philosopher Robert Hooke after the Great Fire in London in 1666

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William Norris in Bethlem Hospital, from an etching by Cruikshank around 1820Credit: CAMERON COLLECTION

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William Hogarth, Scene in a Madhouse, 1733

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A Depiction of the Madby Charles Bell, 1774

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RESTRAINING APPARATUS and SHACKLES

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“Tragic Figure in Chains”painted by

Washington Allston,1800

Allston modeled this painting after a painting by a Britishartist of a chained lunatic.

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Bedlam of the World, 1781

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A visit to Bedlam1794

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Viewing the Mad at the Pennsylvania Asylumfrom Ebenezer Haskel, The Trial of Ebenzer Haskel (Philadelphia, 1869)

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LANCETS for Blood-letting

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Pinel at the Salpêtriérè, painted by Robert-Fleury

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Philippe PinelTreatise on Insanity

Head of BicêtreHospital for Men,

1793

Head of SalpêtrièreHospital for Women,

1795

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Salpêtrière Hospital

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Salpêtrière Hospital

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Pinel’s Innovations

• Case Study Method: Detailed analysis of facts of individual case.

• Separation of patients according to diagnosis; new category of mania without delirium.

• Treatment was possible, not all madness from brain lesions.

• Moral Treatment: Mild but firm suggestion and even coercion.

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Treated with mild methods byphysician Francis Willis in 1788

Diagnosed later with porphyria; attacks Brought on by high levels of arsenic taken in the healing powders he was ingesting.

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Retreat at York

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Description of the Retreat

1813by

Samuel Tuke,grandson ofWilliam Tuke

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“If it be true, that oppression makes a wise man mad, is it to be supposed that stripes, and insults, and injuries, for which the receiver knows no cause, are calculated to make a madman wise? Or would they now exasperate his disease, and excite his resentment?

Samuel Tuke, p. 144.

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Tuke’s Principles

1) Strengthen the power of the patient to control the disorder.

2) Determine modes of coercion and restraint, when absolutely necessary.

3) Promote general comfort of the insane.

Tuke, p. 138

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“Ball of Lunatics at the Asylum” Blackwell’s Island, New York CityFrank Leslie’s Weekly, 1865

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McLean Hospital, Belmont, MA

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McLean Hospital

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Eli Todd,Superintendent

of theHartford Retreat

1823-1833

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Pennsylvania Hospital for the Insane

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Dorothea Dix Hospital, 1849, Raleigh, NC

"I have come to present to you the strong claims of suffering humanity," "I come as the advocate of the helpless, forgotten, insane men and women held in cages, closets, cellars, stalls, pens! Chained, naked, beaten with rods, and lashed into obedience!"

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Michel Foucault (1926-1984)

Histoire de la Folie (1961)

published inabridged English

translation as:

Madness and Civilization (1965)

Moral treatment in the asylum as a

form of social control

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Hieronymus Bosch

“Ship of Fools”

(1490-1500)

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Foucault’s Depiction of Four Principles of the “Therapeutic” Asylum

1) Silence

2) Recognition by Mirror

3) Perpetual Judgment

4) Presence of Medical Personage

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Bentham’s Panopticon, 1787

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Critiques of Foucault

• No great confinement (limited to France in 1650s)

• Work duties not enforced in early asylums

• State did not have that much power over patients—negotiations between families, communities, local officials, superintendants.

• Great variety in quality of asylums.

• Romantic notion of the mad; what about their suffering?

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