2) Describe how the fields of psychiatry and clinical psychology grew and changed over the past 300 years
3) Select four factors which led to the eventual closure of asylums and the present day focus on community care
The history of the care and treatment of the mentally ill represents an endless journey between two extremes:
The history of the care and treatment of the mentally ill represents an endless journey between two extremes:
Confinement in a mental hospital
Living in the community
Following upon humoral theories of illness (both mental and physical), disease was caused by an imbalance of the humors
Following upon humoral theories of illness (both mental and physical), disease was caused by an imbalance of the humors
The role of the physician was to assist in restoring equilibrium
Hot Cold Dry Wet
Earth Air Fire Water
Black Bile Yellow B. Phlegm Blood
Bleeding (cut)
Bleeding (cut)
Vomiting (emetic)
Purging (laxative)
These treatments were nonspecific and applied to “all that ails you”
They long outlived the theories that justified them (even into the 19th century)
Even once realized to be invalid scientifically, doctors would sometimes use an eclectic approach
Society is rural and agricultural
Society is rural and agricultural
Communities are small and scattered
Mental illness is an individual not societal problem to be handled by the family and not the State
Concepts of insanity are fluid and not medical, arising more from cultural, popular, and intellectual theories
Monty Python’s Village Idiot
Institutionalization first appears by the early 1700s
Institutionalization first appears by the early 1700s
Based upon the English principle that society had a corporate responsibility to the poor and dependent
Largely precipitated by demographic shifts and industrialization leading to population increases in cities and a relative increase in the proportion of sick and dependent persons
Geographic mobility leads to less neighborhood cohesion
Medical considerations were minimal; the real issues were economic and public safety
Undifferentiated welfare institutions and almshouses treated the aged, infirm, very young, and mentally ill
A recent invention created by affluent trustees for the less fortunate, not for themselves
A recent invention created by affluent trustees for the less fortunate, not for themselves
As late as 1873 there were only 178 hospitals in the US (1/3 of which were for the mentally ill) with a total of fewer than 50,000 beds
Currently on the order of 15K hospitals in the U.S. and approximately 1.8 million beds
Preindustrial people tended to accept their fate (omnipotent God)
Preindustrial people tended to accept their fate (omnipotent God)
The 18th Century Enlightenment stressed innovation and problem-solving by conscious and purposeful human intervention
Pinel created “moral treatment” which suggested that environmental changes could affect an individual’s psychology and thereby change his behavior
Pinel rejected the prevailing belief that madness was incurable, and he suggested that confinement in a well ordered asylum was indispensable
Pinel rejected the prevailing belief that madness was incurable, and he suggested that confinement in a well ordered asylum was indispensable
Benjamin Rush
William Tuke (created the York Retreat, 1792)
Bedlam (Bethlehem Hospital) was established in the 13th Century but was a storage facility
Bedlam (Bethlehem Hospital) was established in the 13th Century but was a storage facility
Well established American asylums included McLean (Boston), Bloomingdale (NYC), Butler (Providence), Pennsylvania Hospital (Philadelphia), and the Hartford Retreat (Connecticut)
These were set up for wealthy families who would not mix with racial and ethnic minorities, for whom almshouses remained the only place
In 1844 the Association of Medical Superintendents of American Institutions for the Insane (AMSAII) was founded
In 1844 the Association of Medical Superintendents of American Institutions for the Insane (AMSAII) was founded
Coincident with the emergence of Psychiatry, the 2nd subspecialty after surgery
Later to become the American Psychiatric Association
The first medical specialty organization in the nation
Founded the American Journal of Insanity
By the 1820s it became clear that the wealthy asylums could not care for the poor who were overwhelming the almshouses and urban streets
By the 1820s it became clear that the wealthy asylums could not care for the poor who were overwhelming the almshouses and urban streets
During the second half of the 19th Century, the responsibility for the insane slowly fell under the jurisdiction of state asylums
This movement went on for about 100 years, when asylum populations hit their peak in 1955 (roughly 600K patients at that time)
The massive growth of asylums was more of an accident than a proper plan (custodial)
Asylums predated psychiatry, not vice versa
Asylums predated psychiatry, not vice versa
A symbiotic relationship between asylums and psychiatrists developed, each conferring legitimacy upon the other
Psychiatry worked hard to establish itself as the proper leader of asylums
Medicine was an unstable career
There were lots of non-allopathic healers who challenged the primacy of MDs
Insanity was due to two causes: (1) Lesions in the brain; and (2) moral causes
Moral insanity was due to willful violation of natural laws that governed human behavior (such that immorality, improper living conditions, and stresses could precipitate illness)
Because physical causes could not be addressed, treatment focused on the moral causes (masturbation, alcohol abuse, excessive ambition, jealousy, pride, etc.)
Treatment was a synthesis of medicines, religion and morality (OT, religious exercises, recreation, etc)
Heroic treatments were still used but unjustified
Asylum physicians had a good gig going
Asylum physicians had a good gig going
They were influential, enjoyed a well paid job, and had high status in medicine
Little interest in joining the AMA upon its founding in 1847
But asylum life was rapidly becoming a real mess, & by the close of the century asylum legitimacy was being questioned:
But asylum life was rapidly becoming a real mess, & by the close of the century asylum legitimacy was being questioned:
Psychiatry became largely managerial and administrative
Decreases in infant mortality meant more dependent elderly, only some of whom were senile
Mental hospitals became surrogate old age homes
Repositories for those with tertiary syphilis
Mortality rates in asylums were 5x the general population due to over-crowding
General medicine now becomes legitimate and powerful
General medicine now becomes legitimate and powerful
Psychiatrists scrambled to identify new careers outside of institutions, articulating novel treatments and theories
A preventative role is seen and following upon Freudian theory neurosis and stress become legitimate illnesses worth treating
Neurology tries to discredit psychiatry
AMSAII changes its name to the American Medico-Psychological Association (AMPA) to reflect its desired focus as a more “medical” specialty and to dissociate itself from institutions
Viewed psychic distress along a continuum from normal to abnormal
Viewed psychic distress along a continuum from normal to abnormal
Treatment focus shifted away from asylums and toward psychiatric institutes and hospitals
Pathological (Psychiatric) Institute established in NYC in 1895
The appearance of the psychiatric hospital (mission: evaluation, treatment, and referral)
Bellevue Adult Psych Unit 1879
Child Unit 1924
Adolescent Unit 1927
Psychiatry stretched beyond psychopathology to include conduct and other behavioral disorders within its domain (sexual behavior, criminality, etc.)
Psychiatry stretched beyond psychopathology to include conduct and other behavioral disorders within its domain (sexual behavior, criminality, etc.)
This occurs partially because of genuine concern and interest and partly because of the desire to move somewhat away from the chronic and persistently mentally ill who are housed in asylums
The AMPA becomes the APA in 1921
The AMPA becomes the APA in 1921
The Journal of Insanity becomes the American Journal of Psychiatry
Psychiatry is unable to gain a foothold in universities before WWII
The first professional board, the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, is founded in 1934 and provides for board certification
In an effort to decrease costs to the states, home care becomes an option in the 1920s and 30s (Depression era)
In an effort to decrease costs to the states, home care becomes an option in the 1920s and 30s (Depression era)
Families either couldn’t or wouldn’t manage their sick relatives at home
Meanwhile, overcrowding continues at asylums, and there is less and less money available to take care of the infrastructure
All from Europe in the 1920s – 30s
All from Europe in the 1920s – 30s
Quickly adopted in the US because of the great desire to treat the ill
Received with great optimism
The states were spending lots of money on custodial care
Psychiatry was anxious to legitimize itself as a true medical specialty
Regardless of their true utility, these somatic therapies breathed great hope into American psychiatry on the eve of WWII
Jules Wagner-Jauregg (University of Vienna)
Jules Wagner-Jauregg (University of Vienna)
Based upon the observation that mental symptoms occasionally disappeared in mental patients ill with typhoid fever
He injected malarial blood into mentally ill patients (aka malarial therapy)
The problem was that psychiatric nosology was so shotty as were diagnoses themselves that it was hard to apply this treatment to the “right” patient
Egas Moniz, Portugal
Egas Moniz, Portugal
Developed by Moniz in 1935, it was a runaway hit with US physicians
This treatment had a firmer theoretical justification than the shock therapies
A simple surgical procedure that involved severing the nerve fibers of the frontal lobe
Between 1936 and 1951, at least 19,000 lobotomies were performed in the US
After 1945 there became a great emphasis upon shifting care away from hospitals and into the community
After 1945 there became a great emphasis upon shifting care away from hospitals and into the community
The war had influenced psychiatrists:
They saw the impact of environmental stress
They saw that non-institutional treatment could be beneficial
They saw how pervasive these illnesses were; that is, the breadth of psychiatric illness became more evident (not just the severe and persistent illnesses)
By the end of WWII, the APA became more psychodynamic and analytical
By the end of WWII, the APA became more psychodynamic and analytical
These same leaders took control of university departments of psychiatry
There became a contrast between psychiatrists focused on institutional patients (with severe illness of presumed biological etiology) and those focused on psychodynamic and community focused treatment
After 1945, the nation’s healthcare system underwent major changes as a result of:
After 1945, the nation’s healthcare system underwent major changes as a result of:
The NIMH was established and so ended a long period of federal passivity in mental health policy
Community Mental Health Centers were established in every state during the 1950s on the theories of:
Community Mental Health Centers were established in every state during the 1950s on the theories of:
Prevention
Early identification and treatment (following a psychodynamic model)
Follow-up care for institutionalized and hospitalized patients
State contributions outpaced federal allocations because of their optimism and potential financial savings
An historically philosophical field that became experimental in the late 1800s in Germany
An historically philosophical field that became experimental in the late 1800s in Germany
Following upon the work of Watson and Skinner, claimed to have amassed much data by the 1940s, having derived explanatory theories relevant to normal and abnormal behavior
Psychiatrists had little evidence to support their treatments and were generally not well trained in research methods
All parties concluded research must be multidisciplinary, and the NIMH began to support both fields in research and clinical training
Aka “therapeutic community”
Aka “therapeutic community”
Proposed that the environment of an asylum or hospital could assist in the treatment of the mentally ill by organizing a community or social organization which itself would be healing and toward which everyone is expected to make a contribution
This contrasted with authoritarian mental hospitals in the same way that US democracy contrasted with Soviet dictatorship (Cold War)
During the 1950s, psychiatry was once again optimistic:
During the 1950s, psychiatry was once again optimistic:
At least one somatic treatment worked really well (e.g., ECT)
A well thought out theoretical psychodynamic foundation had been effectively established
Milieu Therapy had emerged
However, it was realized that psychotherapeutic treatment varied greatly by practitioner and was not standardized
Chlorpromazine (Thorazine) was synthesized in the late 1950s and was the first psychoactive drug
Chlorpromazine (Thorazine) was synthesized in the late 1950s and was the first psychoactive drug
Initially developed as an antihistamine
It helped to bring together biological and psychodynamic psychiatrists (who also found this and other medications useful)
Many effective drugs followed and helped move patients into the community
Necessitated all sorts of new practitioners (psych nurses, social workers, clinical psychologists)
Of these only psychologists threatened the supremacy of psychiatry & psychologists’ desire to do psychotherapy led to a big fight
The first time that patient rights were really discussed
Medicaid (1965) provided a better reimbursement for nursing home care than for mental hospitals
In 1972 Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) was expanded to include the mentally disabled & the Social Security Act was amended to provide coverage for people who didn’t qualify for benefits
Supplemental Security Income (SSI) was set up to provide income for those whose disabilities made them incapable of holding a job (e.g., elderly, mentally or physically disabled, blind, etc.)
SSDI and SSI made it still easier for the mentally ill to leave hospitals since federal payments would allow them to live in the community
Reagan reversed 3 decades of federal involvement in the care of the mentally ill in 1981 with the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
Reagan reversed 3 decades of federal involvement in the care of the mentally ill in 1981 with the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
Funding was shifted away from the federal government and to states and communities
Billions of dollars were eventually cut
4 major factors contributed to their closure:
4 major factors contributed to their closure:
The Civil Rights Movement
The development of pharmacological interventions
Legislation demanding patients be treated in the “least restrictive setting” (re: community)
Reagan era decreases in funding
- Psychosis or major mental illness becomes no longer a reason to hospitalize someone