Mental Institutions in America

Regular price €198.40
A01=Gerald N. Grob
A01=Robert Golembiewski
American Freedmen's Inquiry Commission
American Psychiatric Association
asylum
asylum history
Author_Gerald N. Grob
Author_Robert Golembiewski
blackwell's
Blackwell's Island
Bloomingdale Asylum
Boston Prison Discipline Society
Category=JM
disability policy analysis
early American psychiatric care systems
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
general
hospital
Iph
isaac
Isaac Ray
lunatic
Lunatic Hospital
massachusetts
Massachusetts General Hospital
McLean Asylum
medicalization of deviance
Mental Hospitals
Mental Illness
Mentally Ill
nineteenth century social reform
North Carolina Board
pennsylvania
Pennsylvania Board
Pennsylvania Hospital
psychiatric institutionalization
Public Mental Hospitals
ray
Samuel Tuke
social determinants health
state
State Charities
State Lunatic
State Lunatic Asylum
State Lunatic Hospital
Tennessee Hospital
Western Pennsylvania Hospital
Worcester Hospital

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138527980
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Sep 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Mental Institutions in America: Social Policy to 1875 examines how American society responded to complex problems arising out of mental illness in the nineteenth century. All societies have had to confront sickness, disease, and dependency, and have developed their own ways of dealing with these phenomena. The mental hospital became the characteristic institution charged with the responsibility of providing care and treatment for individuals seemingly incapable of caring for themselves during protracted periods of incapacitation.The services rendered by the hospital were of benefit not merely to the afflicted individual but to the community. Such an institution embodied a series of moral imperatives by providing humane and scientific treatment of disabled individuals, many of whose families were unable to care for them at home or to pay the high costs of private institutional care. Yet the mental hospital has always been more than simply an institution that offered care and treatment for the sick and disabled. Its structure and functions have usually been linked with a variety of external economic, political, social, and intellectual forces, if only because the way in which a society handled problems of disease and dependency was partly governed by its social structure and values.The definition of disease, the criteria for institutionalization, the financial and administrative structures governing hospitals, the nature of the decision-making process, differential care and treatment of various socio-economic groups were issues that transcended strictly medical and scientific considerations. Mental Institutions in America attempts to interpret the mental hospital as a social as well as a medical institution and to illuminate the evolution of policy toward dependent groups such as the mentally ill. This classic text brilliantly studies the past in depth and on its own terms.