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History of treatment for mental illness
1/27/2006 3:36:57 AM
Hello Friends The following is a very interesting report on the way treatment for mental illness has changed over time. The timeline begins in the year 400 B.C. While some things have changed dramatically, other things have changed surprisingly little. I think you will find this pretty interesting. Timeline: Treatments for Mental Illness 400 B.C. - 1949 | 1950s - 1992 400 B.C. The Greek physician Hippocrates treats mental disorders as diseases to be understood in terms of disturbed physiology, rather than reflections of the displeasure of the gods or evidence of demonic possession, as they were often treated in Egyptian, Indian, Greek, and Roman writings. Later, Greek medical writers set out treatments for mentally ill people that include quiet, occupation, and the use of drugs such as the purgative hellebore. Family members care for most people with mental illness in ancient times. Middle Ages In general, medieval Europeans allow the mentally ill their freedom -- granted they are not dangerous. However, less enlightened treatment of people with mental disorders is also prevalent, with those people often labeled as witches and assumed to be inhabited by demons. Some religious orders, which care for the sick in general, also care for the mentally ill. Muslim Arabs, who establish asylums as early as the 8th century, carry on the quasi-scientific approach of the Greeks. 1407 The first European establishment specifically for people with mental illness is probably established in Valencia, Spain, in 1407. 1600s Europeans increasingly begin to isolate mentally ill people, often housing them with handicapped people, vagrants, and delinquents. Those considered insane are increasingly treated inhumanely, often chained to walls and kept in dungeons. Late 1700s Concern about the treatment of mentally ill people grows to the point that occasional reforms are instituted. After the French Revolution, French physician Phillippe Pinel takes over the Bicêtre insane asylum and forbids the use of chains and shackles. He removes patients from dungeons, provides them with sunny rooms, and also allows them to exercise on the grounds. Yet in other places, mistreatment persists. 1840s U.S. reformer Dorothea Dix observes that mentally ill people in Massachusetts, both men and women and all ages, are incarcerated with criminals and left unclothed and in darkness and without heat or bathrooms. Many are chained and beaten. Over the next 40 years, Dix will lobby to establish 32 state hospitals for the mentally ill. On a tour of Europe in 1854-56, she convinces Pope Pius IX to examine how cruelly the mentally ill are treated. 1883 Mental illness is studied more scientifically as German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin distinguishes mental disorders. Though subsequent research will disprove some of his findings, his fundamental distinction between manic-depressive psychosis and schizophrenia holds to this day. Late 1800s The expectation in the United States that hospitals for the mentally ill and humane treatment will cure the sick does not prove true. State mental hospitals become over-crowded and custodial care supersedes humane treatment. New York World reporter Nellie Bly poses as a mentally ill person to become an inmate at an asylum. Her reports from inside result in more funding to improve conditions. Early 1900s The primary treatments of neurotic mental disorders, and sometimes psychosis, are psychoanalytical therapies ("talking cures") developed by Sigmund Freud and others, such as Carl Jung. Society still treats those with psychosis, including schizophrenia, with custodial care. 1908 Clifford Beers publishes his autobiography, A Mind That Found Itself, detailing his degrading, dehumanizing experience in a Connecticut mental institution and calling for the reform of mental health care in America. Within a year, he will spearhead the founding of the National Committee for Mental Hygiene, an education and advocacy group. This organization will evolve into the National Mental Health Association, the nation's largest umbrella organization for aspects of mental health and mental illness. 1930s Drugs, electro-convulsive therapy, and surgery are used to treat people with schizophrenia and others with persistent mental illnesses. Some are infected with malaria; others are treated with repeated insulin-induced comas. Others have parts of their brain removed surgically, an operation called a lobotomy, which is performed widely over the next two decades to treat schizophrenia, intractable depression, severe anxiety, and obsessions. 1935 Schizophrenia is treated by inducing convulsions, first induced by the injection of camphor, a technique developed by psychiatrist Ladislaus Joseph von Meduna in Budapest. In 1938 doctors run electric current through the brain -- the beginning of electro-shock therapy -- to induce the convulsions, but the process proves more successful in treating depression than schizophrenia. 1946 July 3: President Harry Truman signs the National Mental Health Act, calling for a National Institute of Mental Health to conduct research into mind, brain, and behavior and thereby reduce mental illness. As a result of this law, NIMH will be formally established on April 15, 1949. 1949 Australian psychiatrist J. F. J. Cade introduces the use of lithium to treat psychosis. Prior to this, drugs such as bromides and barbiturates had been used to quiet or sedate patients, but they were ineffective in treating the basic symptoms of those suffering from psychosis. Lithium will gain wide use in the mid-1960s to treat those with manic depression, now known as bipolar disorder. 400 B.C. - 1949 | 1950s - 1992 A Brilliant Madness Home | The Film & More | Special Features | Timeline Gallery | People and Events | Teacher's Guide American Experience | Feedback | Search & Site Map | Shop | Subscribe | Web Credits © New content 1999-2002 PBS Online / WGBH Mental Health And Political Forums http://community.adlandpro.com/forumShow.aspx?ForumID=10129 http://community.adlandpro.com/forumShow.aspx?ForumID=9637 http://community.adlandpro.com/forumShow.aspx?ForumID=8212 http://community.adlandpro.com/forumShow.aspx?ForumID=7420 http://community.adlandpro.com/forumShow.aspx?ForumID=8259 Lifetime web building and hosting for under $40. One time payment http://www.superpayline.com/p002859 The most advanced VOIP system there is anywhere. https://wv0079721.betteruniverse.com/members/index.php?action=buy_miphone Better Universe. The People Helping People Company http://wv0079721.betteruniverse.com May a smile follow you to sleep each night, and be there waiting when you awaken. SIncerly, Bill Vanderbilt / Fanbelt
May a smile follow you to sleep each night and,,,,,be there waiting,,,,,when you awaken http://community.adlandpro.com/forums/8212/ShowForum.aspx Sincerely, Billdaddy
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Re: History of treatment for mental illness
1/27/2006 5:08:46 AM
Thanks William.. It's very interesting to see how far we've come.. Still not far enough, but this just shows we still have alot of learning to do.
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Re: History of treatment for mental illness
1/27/2006 2:24:17 PM
Hi Philena Thanks for stopping by and posting. You are right about having a long way to go. The truth of the matter is, lately, we have been going backwards. We need a lot more people to get involved with mental health issues than we have now. Our voice right now can barly make an echo down the long halls of congress let alone get anyones attention. I hope things change before the 2,006 elections. Take care Philena. Come back soon OK ? Mental Health And Political Forums http://community.adlandpro.com/forumShow.aspx?ForumID=10129 http://community.adlandpro.com/forumShow.aspx?ForumID=9637 http://community.adlandpro.com/forumShow.aspx?ForumID=8212 http://community.adlandpro.com/forumShow.aspx?ForumID=7420 http://community.adlandpro.com/forumShow.aspx?ForumID=8259 Lifetime web building and hosting for under $40. One time payment http://www.superpayline.com/p002859 The most advanced VOIP system there is anywhere. https://wv0079721.betteruniverse.com/members/index.php?action=buy_miphone Better Universe. The People Helping People Company http://wv0079721.betteruniverse.com May a smile follow you to sleep each night, and be there waiting when you awaken. SIncerly, Bill Vanderbilt / Fanbelt
May a smile follow you to sleep each night and,,,,,be there waiting,,,,,when you awaken http://community.adlandpro.com/forums/8212/ShowForum.aspx Sincerely, Billdaddy
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Julia Youngblood

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Re: History of treatment for mental illness
2/1/2006 12:20:40 PM
Hi Bill! Yes, this is very interesting! And no, we have not come far enough and I was just thinking the other day how much we are reverting backwards...or to me it seems that way... I finally found my son, he is in an acute care hosptial right now, waiting for a bed in the state hospital. I am not happy with the place he is because they insist upon giving him Thorazine. He has been on many medications and the one that was working was Risperdol...and it was the only pill he had to take! My understanding is that a lot of people with mental illness take multiple medications...and that my son is lucky to be taking only one.....but now, with the Thorazine being used, I don't know what the out come will be. I guess with no health insurance the patient becomes a guiena pig. I have his paperwork in place with a patient assistance program but it will not kick in until he is released from the hospital...then they will cover the full cost of the Risperdol....in the meantime, he will be taking whatever is most cost effective for the hospital! I do not like all this switching of medications....I sometimes think it does more damage than good. My question to the charge nurse was, why change something if it is working and all I got was because it is cheap!!! Not a good response! Your friend in Oregon, Julia Youngblood "The Ink Lady"
"To see the earth as it truly is, small and blue and beautiful in that eternal silence where it floats, is to see ourselves as riders on the earth together, brothers and sisters on that bright loveliness in the eternal."
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Re: History of treatment for mental illness
2/1/2006 2:07:03 PM
Re: History of treatment for mental illness Posted: 02-01-2006 02:57 PM Hi Julia I am so happy that you have found your son finally. It is a good thing that he is in some type of a care system no matter how bad the place might be. The many months of wondering where he was and if he was even alive are over now. I know that the word Thorazine strikes fear into the hearts of many people but it is actually still one of the most commonly used meds for people with serious mantal illness. Once he gets into the state hospital they will most likely try different meds and hopefully they will come up with the best combination and dosage level to help your son. One very important thing to do no w , while you know his whereabouts and have access to him, is to get him to sign a release so that you will have the right to get health information about him and be able to know where he is at all times. Without this release, he may very well just vanish into thin air again and you will have no way to keep tabs on him. You might also want to consider getting him to make you his representative payee. If he is not allready on dissability, they will most likely get him approved for it while in the hospital. They do this so that the hospital can recoup some of the cost for his stay in the hospital. If you are his rep payee, you will be able to make some payment arrangements with the hospital and keep some of his back pay to help get him set up in an apartment or something once he gets out of the hospital. If the hospital gets a rep payee for him they will take all of his money except for a very small amount. Here in PA they will take all of ones back pay and allow the patient to receive $60 per month for their personal use. Then once they get out of the hospital, they have nothing to help them get started out in their new life. The added stress from this can lead them right dowm the same path that got them into the state hospital in the first place. Over the years of going in and out of treatment and doing my advaocacy work I have seen this very scienario repeat itself a hundred times. A homeless persom with mental illness can go into the hospital and go through treatment that will help them have a normal life and an opportunity to start all over but, once discharged, end up right back on the streets as a homeless person again with nowhere to turn. Julia, please keep me informed of your son's situation so that I might be able to help you in some little way as things progress. If he can't find access to meds or can't afford to pay for his meds, please let me know. I have a list of places to go where he may be able to get his meds at little or no cost. There are many agencies that I am familier with and I might be able to help you both find your way through this mental health system. Good luck to you and your son Julia. By the way Julia, what is your son's name? You know,if he ever wants to talk to someone with some common interests and concerns, I would love to be able to maybe give him a call or write him a letter now and then. Just let me know if there is anything I can do to help OK Julia. I am here for you Girl. Sincerly, Bill Vanderbilt --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
May a smile follow you to sleep each night and,,,,,be there waiting,,,,,when you awaken http://community.adlandpro.com/forums/8212/ShowForum.aspx Sincerely, Billdaddy
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