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A01=Barbara Brazos
A01=Margot McMillen
A01=Richard Lael
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Author_Barbara Brazos
Author_Margot McMillen
Author_Richard Lael
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Evolution of a Missouri Asylum: Fulton State Hospital, 1851-2006

Paperback | English

By (author): Barbara Brazos Margot McMillen Richard Lael

Fulton State Hospital was not only Missouri s first state mental asylum but also the first such institution west of the Mississippi. In tracing its founding and evolution over a century and a half, this book sheds light on both a neglected aspect of the state''s history and the development of mental health care in America. It acknowledges the noble aspirations of Fulton State Hospital as well as its failures, throughout much of its existence, to transform those aspirations into realities.

This institutional history of the hospital traces the debates surrounding its creation (as the State Lunatic Asylum) in a time when mental illness was barely understood. Although the Fulton hospital was initially conceived as a treatment facility, it quickly transformed into a primarily custodial institution. It existed as a self-sufficient establishment until the mid-twentieth century, dependent on patient labour and even producing its own food. But for the most socially disadvantaged and for the severely delusional, life at Fulton was anything but therapeutic.The book describes not only the lofty goals of professionals dedicated to treating the mentally ill but also an institution once clouded by overcrowding, financial mismanagement, political cronyism, and wrongful confinement. It considers segregation within the hospital, where the first black doctor was hired in 1960 and where racism nevertheless continued to flourish, and it describes how, even after the 1921 Eleemosynary Act, the patronage system continued to plague Fulton for two more decades.

The authors reveal changing attitudes toward new treatments in the mid-twentieth century as psychotherapy and drugs became common, and decisions at Fulton regarding patient care are described within the context of progress in Europe and the eastern United States. The book addresses the complexities facing the physician-superintendents who supervised both medical therapies and administrative matters, depicting ongoing tension between hospital finances and state support and showing the difficulties state institutions faced in a low tax/low public service environment.As Fulton State Hospital enters the twenty-first century, clients have become active in the development of institutional policies a far cry from the warehousing of patients a hundred years ago. In tracing these seismic shifts in mental health care, this book offers an eye-opening exploration of how one state has sought to care for its citizens. See more
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A01=Barbara BrazosA01=Margot McMillenA01=Richard LaelAge Group_UncategorizedAuthor_Barbara BrazosAuthor_Margot McMillenAuthor_Richard Laelautomatic-updateCategory1=Non-FictionCategory=MBPKCategory=MBXCOP=United StatesDelivery_Pre-orderFormat=BCFormat_PaperbackLanguage_EnglishPA=Temporarily unavailablePrice_€20 to €50PS=Activesoftlaunch

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Product Details
  • Format: Paperback
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Feb 2016
  • Publisher: University of Missouri Press
  • Publication City/Country: United States
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9780826220745

About Barbara BrazosMargot McMillenRichard Lael

Richard L. Lael is Professor of History at Westminster College in Fulton Missouri USA and author of The Yamashita Precedent: War Crimes and Command Responsibility.Barbara Brazos is a Registered Nurse at Mid-Missouri Mental Health Center in Columbia USA.Margot Ford McMillen is an adjunct instructor in English at Westminster College whose five other books include Called to Courage: FourWomen in Missouri History.

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