Hospital Social Service Quarterly

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Hospital Social Service Quarterly The Hospital Social Service Quarterly A Magazine Published in the Interest of Social Service and Dealing with the Many Problems of the Hospital Superintendent, Doctor, Auxiliary Committee, Volunteer and Nurse in Relation to Medical Social Service. PUBLISHED QUARTERLY UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE HOSPITAL SOCIAL SERVICE ASSOCIATION OF NEW YORK CITY EDITORIAL STAFF DR. E. G. STILLMAN, Editor MISS N. F. CUMMINGS, Managing Editor 405 Lexington Avenue, New York,. N.Y. CONTRIBUTING EDITORS MICHAEL M. DAVIS, JR., Director, Boston Dzsjnmsary JOHN E. RANSOM, Superintnzdani, 7 he fifichael Reese Dz:~peusary, Chicago Mrss IDA M. CANNON, Chief of Social Service, fifassachusetts General Hospital, Boston Mrss MARGARET S. BRoGDEN, Super'lJisor, Social Service DejJ't, Johns Hopkzizs Hospital, Baltzinore Mrss M. ANTOINETTE CANNON, Chief of Social Servzce, Hospital of University of Penmylvania, Philadelphza Mrss MARY E. WADLEY, Chief of Soda! Service, Bellevue Hospital, New York MISS EDNA G. HENRY, Director, Social Service DejJ' t, Indiana University, IndzaJtapolis, Ind. DR. jESSICA B. PEIXOTTO, University of CaliforJtia Hospital, Berkeley, Cal. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $J.50 SINGLE COPIES, .50 Advertising Rates may be bad on application Copyrighted by E. G. Stillman CONTENTS PREVIOUS NUMBERS Vol. I No.1 The Epidemic of Influenza. DR. Lours I. HARRIS...................... 3 Medical Social Work and the Influenza Epidemic. M. ANTOINETTE CANNON 15 Extension of Medical Social Work to Naval Hospitals. RuTH V. EMERSON 22 Summer Training School in Social Reconstruction at Smith College. PRoF. F. STUART CHAPIN ............................ 27 The American Association of Hospital Social Workers ................. 33 St. Luke's Hospital Course for Social Service Volunteers. AMYL. CLEAVER 41 Vol. I No.2 The Medical Social Unit. SIDNEY E. GoLDSTEIN...................... 55 The Clothing Committee. MARY BELKNAP .MURPHY.................... 63 The Follow-up Work at Presbyterian Hospital. E. 'I'. PATTERSON, R.N. 71 The Nutrition Class. M1ss LucY 0PPEN............................... 86 Medical Social Service and Hospital Organization. RICHARD MAcKENZIE 95 The Handicapped Employment Bureau. Mrss E. RIGBY .............. 101 Occupational Therapy for Interned Patients. ALicE H. WALKER, R. N. 106 Relation of Dispensary Social Service to the Syphilitic. DR. ANNA M. RICHARDSON 109 Work for Convalescent Children. HENRY DwiGHT CHAPIN, :\L D ....... ll4 Vol. I No.3 The Therapeutic Use of a Hospital Library. ELIZABETH GREEN ....... 147 SIDNEY I. ScHwAB, M.D. Annual Meeting of the American Association of Hospital Social Workers 158 My Medical Social Service Experience in France. RICHARD CABOT, M.D. 163 Is There Such a Thing as Clear-Cut Function? HELEN WALLERSTEIN ... 157 Standards of Social Service Work. E. H. LEWINSKI-CORWIN, Ph. D ..... 179 Course in Social Work with Mental Hygiene Cases. KATHERINE TucKER 182 Employment Bureau for the Handicapped. MARION WALLACE ........ 184 Maternal Nativity aud Infant Mortality. P. R. EASTMAN....... 190 Treatment of Malnutrition among Children. MuRRAY H. BAss, M.D ..• 195 The Polish Grey Samaritans. ELsA M. BuTLER ..................... 200 To What Extent Shall the Settlement Worker Use Case Records w. H. MATTHEWS 204 Increase in the Last Four Years in Cost of Living in an Unskilled Laborer's Family. M. E. WADLEY ............................. 211 Nutrition Cases at St. George's Church. HELEN WALLBRIDGE, M. D ..... 216 Practical Points in Hospital Social Service. E. WEISS ............... 223 Notes on Life of St. Vincent de Paul. N. F. CuMMINGS ................ 228 Who Started Hospital Social Service? S. S. GoLDWATER, M.D .......... 235 The Hospital Social Service Quarterly VoL. I NOVEMBER 1919 No.4 MEDICAL SOCIAL SERVICE OF THE FUTURE* CHARLES P. EMERSON, M.D. Dean Indiana School of 111 edicine Indianapolis, Indiana Few ideas in the hospital world have proven as contagious as has that of medical social service. This movement started in Boston about thirteen years ago, following the report of the work of Dr. Richard C. Cabot and his friends in the Massachusetts Gen­ eral Hospital. Five years later over seventy such departments had been organized in hospitals and dispensaries and now medical insti­ tutions seem to consder a social service worker as a necessity and are almost ashamed if they have none. Indeed, we have hardly begun to realize the value of these departments to our medical institutions and to their patients. *Read before the Social Service Section of the American Hospital Association, Cin­ cinnati· Sept. 11, 1919. 264 lVIedjcal Social Service of the Future But what is medical social service? Several speakers of this conference have used that technical term so often and so glibly during the past two days that they must have thought we all would know just exactly what they meant. Did we? I did not. A few years ago when I corresponded with seventy-two such departments to find ou't what they were doing I found that hospital social service meant seventy-two different, often quite different, things. The chances are that our differences of opinion are in part at least due to the fact that we are talking on quite different subjects. \iVhat is the essen6al element in medical social service? Let us try to clarify our minds by reviewing some of the various forms which hospital social service has taken in the past in order that we may proceed with our subject, medical social service of the future. At the outset we must, as we review all these different forms of medical social service, ask the question: Have these a greatest common divisor? If not, is there in this confused mass of ideas, most of them excellent, one or a few which deserve to be empha­ sized in the future at the expense of the others? There are several very good reasons why the medical social service of the past started along so many different lines. One is that the first motive which prompted every worker was the desire to correct certain definite, glaring errors which he had noticed in the methods of the administrative or professional workers of the hospital or dispensary in which he was interested, and since the weak points in the different institutions were so varied in character the aims of their social service workers were equally varied. It was a common observation then that the patients of dispensaries and hospitals were so bewildered, so forlorn, so confused, so unhappy. They did not know how to use the professional service offered and nobody seemed to care. Usually they could not follow the advice given. The doctors were so busy, the nurses so professional, and the patient only a "case." The social service workers first en­ deavored to treat the patients as friends. They tried to make them feel at home. They acted as guides, as interpreters. They ex­ plained what the doctors' advice meant. They enoouraged, they comforted, they persuaded, they quieted anger, they healed hurt Charles P. Emerson, M.D. 265 feelings, they listened to the problems of the home and they per­ sonally as well as through benevolent societies helped to solve these problems in order that the mother or wage earner might improve the advantage offered by the hospital. Such service was splendid and should continue, but not as medical social service. This is but the correction of faults in the organized work of administrators, doctors and nurses, faults which were the inheritance of the black century (the Eighteenth) of nursing and of medical care. These persons should break \Vith the past and make such social service unnecessary. It surely is poor business to organize and support one expensive department to correct the unnecessary shortcomings of other departments. Some of this work may always be necessary, but it should be a side issue. Another reason for the confusion and variety in the efforts of early social service workers was their inability to obtain coopera­ tion satisfactory to themselves with the long established city charity organizations and other general philanthropic societies. It is usually necessary for the social service workers to organize more or less material relief for their pa6ents ami. along their own definite lines. Since their object in this help is different frmn that of the charity worker and since the older organizations already had fixed policies and habits well established, a failure to cooperate was in some cases unavoidable and so the medical worker must of neces~ity act inde­ pendently. I think I am correct that the actual, concrete on;aniza­ ti.on of the early work was in no small degree the direct result of a failure of city charitable societies and these hospital workers to get together. But this state of affairs should not be permanent. One of the most gratifying and flattering trihutes to the value of medical social service is the willing and generous support and cooperation of those who control the funds of benevolent societies for the relief of the sick poor. This is fortunate in more \Va~vs than one since the medical worker loses value when he becomes involved in the dis­ pensation of material relief. Social service workers should know hovv to interest benevolent societies in their patients, but that should be a side issue. The sick poor we try to interest them in are not a nevv problem to these societies. They are the same persons they 266 Medical Social Service of the Future have helped for years. If they cooperate with us, this work at once gains value. Of one point we are certain: the medical social service worker should not personally dispense any material relief. We believe that a hospital cannot even afford to allow general charity workers in its buildings (although it should be greedy to get aJl it can for its patients and their families from the organizations whose officers are outside of its walls). Free medical and surgical treat­ ment is one of the greatest of charities, certainly it is one of the most expensive, and it is desirable that the patient understand this in order that we may obtain his necessary cooperation in the treat­ ment of his own case, and this co-operation involves frankness, confidence and a certain camaraderie between patient and doctor.
Recommended publications
  • Psychiatry* Thomas A
    1 Carlos Morra and Mateo Kreiker 4. Thomas A. Ban: The Birth of a Medical Discipline: Psychiatry* Table of Contents From Cullen’s “neuroses” to Reil’s “psychiaterie” February 22, 2018 Classifications of insanity in the late 18thand early 19th century March 1, 2018 Bayle’s concept of dementia April 5, 2018 Reflexes of the brain March 22, 2018 Sechenov’s re-evaluation of mental faculties March 29, 2018 Thomas A. Ban: The Birth of a Medical Discipline: Psychiatry From William Cullen’s “neuroses” to Johann Christian Reil’s “psychiaterie” Madness may be as old as mankind (Porter 2002). Yet, development of the discipline dedicated to study and treat “madness,” that was to be referred to as “psychiatry,” began only in the late 18th century. Instrumental to this development was William Cullen (1712-1790), a professor of medicine and physics at the University of Edinburgh, in Scotland. Stimulated by the research of Boissier de Sauvages (1706-1767) at the University of Montpellier, in France, who described and classified diseases as botanists describe and classify plants (Sauvages 1768), Cullen (1769, 1777), classified diseases into four classes (pyrexias, neuroses, cachexias and locales), with as many as 19 orders and 132 genera (Doig, Ferguson, Milne and Passmore 1993). Cullen (1772), defined disease as an excess or deficiency of “sensibilities” in his Synopsis Nosologiae Methodicae and in his treatise published in 1777 with the title “First Lines of Practice 2 of Physic” he introduced the term “neuroses” for a class of disease he believed were
    [Show full text]
  • Received \ Date Entered National Register of Historic Places Inventory
    NPS Form 10-900 (7-81) United States Department of the Interior National Park Service For NPS use only National Register of Historic Places received \ 2 \c Inventory — Nomination Form date entered See instructions in How to Complete National Register Forms Type all entries — complete applicable sections 1. Name historic Vermont Asylum for the Insane - Brattleboro Retreat and/or common i""" Brattleboro Retreat fpreferred)"' ' 2. Location Road' street & number Linden Street- -^Vermont -Route 50) and Upper Dummerston Ny^A not for publication city, town Brattleboro N/A_ vicinity of state Vermont code 50 county Windham code 025 3. Classification Category Ownership Status Present Use district public X occupied x agriculture museum v building(s) x _ private unoccupied commercial park x structure both work in progress x educational private residence x site Public Acquisition Accessible entertainment religious object __ (in process X yes: restricted government scientific N/A /being considered yes: unrestricted industrial transportation no military _x_ other: private non 4. Owner of Property profit hospital name Brattleboro Retreat street & number 75 Linden Street city, town Brattlebor o N/A_ vicinity of state Vermont 5. Location of Legal Description courthouse, registry of deeds, etc. Office of the Town Clerk street & number 320 Main Street city, town Brattleboro state Vermont 6. Representation in Existing Surveys Vermont Historic Sites and title _____ Structures Survey has this property been determined eligible? yes no date August 1974 federal state county local depository for survey records Vermont Division for Historic Preservation city, town Montpelier state Vermont Condition Check one Check one X excellent deteriorated _ x.
    [Show full text]
  • Phospholipase C Activation Inducedby Noradrenaline In
    The EMBO Journal vol.6 no.6 pp. 1595-1598, 1987 Phospholipase C activation induced by noradrenaline in rat hippocampal slices is potentiated by GABA-receptor stimulation Marco Ruggiero, Renato Corradettil, Vincenzo Chiarugi ac-adrenoreceptors are coupled to phospholipase C activation, and Giancarlo Pepeul and fl-adrenoreceptors stimulate the formation of cAMP, which mimics the electrophysiological actions of ,B-adrenergic stimula- Institute of General Pathology, Molecular Biology Laboratory, Viale G.B.Morgagni 50, 1-50134 Firenze, and 'Department of Preclinical and tion in the hippocampus (Madison and Nicoll, 1986b). GABA- Clinical Pharmacolgy, Viale G.B.Morgagni 65, 1-50134 Firenze, Italy ergic and noradrenergic transducing pathways are interrelated by L.Melli in the central nervous system; GABA enhances the accumula- Communicated tion of cAMP induced by f3-adrenergic stimulation (Karbon et We have studied the effect of -y-aminobutyric acid (GABA) al., 1984). Our results are the first demonstration that GABA and other GABA-receptor agonists (3-aminopropanesulphonic potentiates the effect of NA on polyphosphoinositide metabolism, acid and muscimol) on the noradrenaline-induced stimula- a transmembrane signalling system triggered by activation of tion of polyphosphoinositide metabolism in rat hippocampal adrenoreceptors believed to be responsible for the inhibitory ef- slices. Formation of water-soluble inositol phosphates, and fect of NA on hippocampal electrical activity (Mueller et al., polyphosphoinositide metabolism were studied in hippo- 1982). campal slices prelabelied with [3H]myoinositol. Noradren- aline induced formation of inositol mono-, bis- and Results trisphosphate during 10 min incubation in the presence of lithium; activation of phospholipase C by noradrenaline was Effect ofNA on polyphosphoinositide metabolism in rat hippo- also reflected by the hydrolysis of polyphosphoinositides and campal slices by the increased metabolism of phosphatidylinositol.
    [Show full text]
  • REASONING AGAINST Madness Psychiatry and the State in Rio De Janeiro, 1830–1944
    REASONING AGAINST Madness Psychiatry and the State in Rio de Janeiro, 1830–1944 MANUELLA MEYER Reasoning against Madness MMeyer.inddeyer.indd i 55/15/2017/15/2017 55:44:26:44:26 PPMM Rochester Studies in Medical History Senior Editor: Theodore M. Brown Professor of History and Preventive Medicine University of Rochester Additional Titles of Interest Infections, Chronic Disease, and the Epidemiological Transition: A New Perspective Alexander Mercer Save the Babies: American Public Health Reform and the Prevention of Infant Mortality, 1850–1929 Richard A. Meckel Intrusive Interventions: Public Health, Domestic Space, and Infectious Disease Surveillance in England, 1840–1914 Graham Mooney The Antivaccine Heresy: “Jacobson v. Massachusetts” and the Troubled History of Compulsory Vaccination in the United States Karen L. Walloch Healthy Boundaries: Property, Law, and Public Health in England and Wales, 1815–1872 James G. Hanley Psychiatry and Racial Liberalism in Harlem, 1936–1968 Dennis A. Doyle Childbirth, Maternity, and Medical Pluralism in French Colonial Vietnam, 1880–1945 Thuy Linh Nguyen Setting Nutritional Standards: Theory, Policies, Practices Edited by Elizabeth Neswald, David F. Smith, and Ulrike Thoms Technological Change in Modern Surgery: Historical Perspectives on Innovation Edited by Thomas Schlich and Christopher Crenner The History of the Brain and Mind Sciences: Technique, Technology, Therapy Edited by Stephen T. Casper and Delia Gavrus A complete list of titles in the Rochester Studies in Medical History series may be found on our website, www.urpress.com. MMeyer.inddeyer.indd iiii 55/15/2017/15/2017 55:46:52:46:52 PPMM Reasoning against Madness Psychiatry and the State in Rio de Janeiro, 1830–1944 Manuella Meyer MMeyer.inddeyer.indd iiiiii 55/15/2017/15/2017 55:46:52:46:52 PPMM The University of Rochester Press gratefully acknowledges generous support from the University of Richmond.
    [Show full text]
  • Psychiatry in Historical Retrospect
    PSYCHIATRY IN HISTORICAL RETROSPECT By FORREST M. HARRISON, M.D. BROOKLINE, MASS. Part ii . Conclus ion * Age of Feud alis m knowledge was a crime that the (iooo to 1300 A.D.) medieval Church, and her powerful The next three hundred years wit- governmental allies, stood ever ready to punish. nessed the introduction and rise of the feudal system in Europe, and we We hear a few individuals, however, have a period in the historical develop- crying out in the wilderness, so to speak. One of the most interesting ment of psychiatry which may be termed the Age of Feudalism. It ex- characters of this period, who lived in the eleventh century, was Con- tended from 1000 to 1300 a .d . The condition of affairs in Europe stantinus Africanus. He was born at during this era was little better than Carthage, visited Arabian schools, it was in the Dark Ages. The Church, and traveled for thirty-nine years in with its spiritual appeal, its attrac- the Orient. On returning to his own tive symbolism, and its splendid or- country, he was taken for a sorcerer, ganization, found it expedient and and was in danger for a time of losing advisable to combine its forces with his life. He fled to Salerno and en- the state through feudalistic ties. As tered court as a private secretary. He a result, all attempts at experimental soon tired of this, however, and went science were suppressed. Men no into a monastery, Monte Cassino, longer cared to think for themselves where he passed his best years trans- or to discover things.
    [Show full text]
  • Current Problems in the Mental Health Field
    ISSN 2411-9563 (Print) European Journal of Social Sciences Sep-Dec 2017 ISSN 2312-8429 (Online) Education and Research Vol. 11 Nr. 1 Current Problems in the Mental Health Field Kilda Çela Gusha Specialist of Public Health, Shkoder. Albania; Irena Shala Lecture at University of Shkodra. Albania; Remila Kalo University of Shkodra Luigj Gurakuqi.Albania Abstract Mental health problems are conditions that do not meet the criteria for disease but affect the normal quality and continuity of everyday life. They are the emotional and psychological difficulties of the individual, which occur as a result of circumstantial or persistent stresses or of a reflection of the emotions between the individual and the environment where he lives (WHO, 2005). Health is seen as "not just a lack of sickness or disability," but rather as "a complete physical, mental and social well-being." This definition significantly expands the concept of mental health, which should not be defined in a restrictive manner as the absence of mental disorders, but should be defined in a positive and comprehensive view (WHO, 1985). Ultimately, mental health is defined as "a state of well-being in which the individual realizes his or her own potential, is able to cope with daily life concerns, is productive and fruitfully in his work, and is capable of delivering his contribution to the community where he lives (WHO, 2001). Mental health problems are usually associated with important concerns in social, professional, or other important activities. In many cases, there appears to be a continuity between mental health problems and mental disorders, making the diagnosis even more complex (CDC, 2011).
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Managing the Mad: Lunacy Provision and Social Control In
    Managing the Mad: Lunacy Provision and Social Control in Kent, 1774–1874 Anne Elizabeth Goad Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at Queen Mary University of London in September 2020 1 Statement of Originality I, Anne Elizabeth Goad, confirm that the research included within this thesis is my own work or that where it has been carried out in collaboration with, or supported by others, that this is duly acknowledged below and my contribution indicated. Previously published material is also indicated below. I attest that I have exercised reasonable care to ensure that the work is original, and does not to my knowledge break any UK law, infringe any third party’s copyright or other Intellectual Property Right, or contain any confidential material. I accept that the College has the right to use plagiarism detection software to check the electronic version of this thesis. I confirm that this thesis has not been previously submitted for the award of a degree by this or any other university. The copyright of this thesis rests with the author and no quotation from it or information derived from it may be published without the prior written consent of the author. Anne Goad 20 September 2020 2 Abstract This thesis examines lunacy provision in Kent between 1774 and 1874 from the perspective of the anti-psychiatrists of the 1960s and 70s. It is a regional study that seeks to demonstrate the coercive bedrock of the discipline of psychiatry as evident from the treatment and care of the insane in previous centuries.
    [Show full text]
  • The Problem of Mental Disorder
    M01_COCK8068_08_SE_C01.qxd 12/22/09 7:36 PM Page 1 MARKED SET 1 ■■■ The Problem of Mental Disorder Mental disorder affects the lives and well-being of millions of people through- out the world. The exact number of persons who suffer from some form of it is not known. Many afflicted people do not come to the attention of reporting agencies and community investigators face a multitude of problems in obtain- ing fully reliable data on the extent of mental disorders in noninstitutional- ized populations. But enough data are available in advanced societies to make relatively accurate assessments, and it is clear that mental disorder is a major social problem. Perhaps almost one out of every five Americans is affected by some type of mental disorder annually. This estimate comes from two major surveys: the Epidemiologic Catchment Area (ECA) study of the early 1980s and the National Comorbidity Survey (NCS) of the early 1990s. These surveys estimated that during a one-year period, approximately 22 percent of the U.S. adult population between the ages of 18–54 years—about 44 million people—has diagnosable mental disorders. However, in 2002, William Narrow and his colleagues (Narrow et al. 2002) reexamined the data and revised the estimate to the lower but still substantial figure of 18.5 percent of all adults 18–54 years of age. The extent of mental disorder and the high social and economic costs associated with it are considerable. But what is truly the most damaging aspect of mental illness is its shattering effect on its victims and their families.
    [Show full text]
  • The “Great LSD Scandal” at Newhaven Private Hospital & the Social Foundations of Mental He
    Beyond the aetiology debate: the “great LSD scandal” at Newhaven Private Hospital & the social foundations of mental health legislation in Victoria, Australia Megan Kristine Lomax ORCID ID: 0000-0002-1457-8247 Doctor of Philosophy October 2017 Department of History & Philosophy of Science School of Historical & Philosophical Studies Faculty of Arts Thesis submitted in total fulfilment of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy 1 ABSTRACT This research presents a case for the extension of existing analyses of Australian psychiatric scandals beyond the conclusion that such events are an inherent feature of the profession by virtue of its failure to resolve the aetiology debate. A mid-century impasse in the aetiology debate – the continuous shifting over time of professional commitment between organic and environmental aetiologies of mental illness – has been identified as the catalyst for the emergence of the therapeutic paradigm of eclecticism that fostered the deep sleep therapy and ‘Therapeutic Community’ programs that were central to Australia’s two infamous psychiatric scandals at Chelmsford and Townsville, respectively. While these two affairs were enduring the scrutiny of commissions of inquiry, the recommendations of which translated to the legislative reform of mental health services in the states of New South Wales and Queensland, a third such scandal was unfolding at Newhaven Private Hospital in Victoria involving the “injudicious use” of therapeutic LSD. By the late 1980s and early 90s, a number of former “patients” of Newhaven emerged claiming that they had never suffered any mental illness and that the LSD they had received had not been administered for therapeutic purposes but rather as a recruitment tool for a fringe religious sect known as The Family that had commandeered the hospital and the loyalty of a number of its staff.
    [Show full text]
  • Missouri Asylums Their History & Evolution
    MISSOURI ASYLUMS THEIR HISTORY & EVOLUTION MIMH Webinar Felix T. Vincenz, Ph.D., Chief Operating Officer Amanda Hunyar, Hospital Librarian/Historian St. Louis Psychiatric Rehabilitation Center Note: Many materials stolen shamelessly from Dr. Robert Reitz What preceded the asylum? v No real treatment v Instead, in increasing orders of likelihood q Detention in the family home in attics and basements q Alms houses maintained by local churches or poor farms maintained in urban counties q Homelessness q Incarceration in jails or prisons, chained to the wall and suffering brutal and inhumane living conditions v Changes began with the 18 Century’s Age of Enlightenment q Introduction of Moral Treatment 2 Moral Treatment v Key Philosophy q Rest and recuperation away from fetid urban environments, instead exposing patients to the restorative effects of fresh air and water, sunshine, and rolling countryside, complete with a daily routine of both work and leisure q Cared for by staff who lived among them, and treated them with dignity and respect q Patient outcomes depended on their conduct, recognizing the patient's agency and moral autonomy. Thus, patients were rewarded for good conduct and received minimal use of restraint for poor behavior, but without the abuses of earlier times 3 Moral Treatment (con.) v Originators q Physicians: Vincenzo Chiarugi, Phillipe Pinel, Jean Esquinol q Patient: Jean-Baptiste Pussin (France) q Merchant, Minister and Reformer: Samuel Tuke (England) q Hospital: La Bicêtre, a Parisian asylum (1780) run by Pinel q Transition
    [Show full text]
  • Laboratoire Italien, 20 | 2017 Music, Theater, and the Moral Treatment: the Casa Dei Matti in Aversa and Pal
    Laboratoire italien Politique et société 20 | 2017 Musique italienne et sciences médicales au XIXe siècle Music, theater, and the moral treatment: the Casa dei Matti in Aversa and Palermo Musique, théâtre et traitement moral : la Casa dei matti d’Aversa et celle de Palerme Musica, teatro e trattamento morale : la Casa dei matti d’Aversa e quella di Palermo Carmel Raz Publisher ENS Éditions Electronic version URL: http:// Brought to you by Columbia University laboratoireitalien.revues.org/1581 Libraries ISSN: 2117-4970 Electronic reference Carmel Raz, « Music, theater, and the moral treatment: the Casa dei Matti in Aversa and Palermo », Laboratoire italien [Online], 20 | 2017, Online since 02 November 2017, connection on 07 November 2017. URL : http://laboratoireitalien.revues.org/1581 This text was automatically generated on 7 November 2017. Laboratoire italien – Politique et société est mis à disposition selon les termes de la licence Creative Commons Attribution - Pas d'Utilisation Commerciale - Pas de Modification 4.0 International. Music, theater, and the moral treatment: the Casa dei Matti in Aversa and Pal... 1 Music, theater, and the moral treatment: the Casa dei Matti in Aversa and Palermo Musique, théâtre et traitement moral : la Casa dei matti d’Aversa et celle de Palerme Musica, teatro e trattamento morale : la Casa dei matti d’Aversa e quella di Palermo Carmel Raz 1 After her carriage broke down near the town of Aversa, a few miles away from Naples, Maria Malibran decided to visit the local madhouse with her companions. The first patient they saw was a young nobleman suffering from a profound melancholy caused by a romantic disappointment.
    [Show full text]
  • A History of Modern Psychology in Context / by Wade E
    AHISTORYOF MODERN PSYCHOLOGY IN CONTEXT Wade E. Pickren and Alexandra Rutherford A JOHN WILEY & SONS, INC., PUBLICATION This book is printed on acid-free paper. Copyright © 2010 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey. Published simultaneously in Canada. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise, except as permitted under Section 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act, without either the prior written permission of the Publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate per-copy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc., 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, (978) 750-8400, fax (978) 646-8600, or on the web at www.copyright.com. Requests to the Publisher for permission should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030, (201) 748-6011, fax (201) 748-6008. Limit of Liability/Disclaimer of Warranty: While the publisher and author have used their best efforts in preparing this book, they make no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the contents of this book and specifically disclaim any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. No warranty may be created or extended by sales representatives or written sales materials. The advice and strategies contained herein may not be suitable for your situation. You should consult with a professional where appropriate. Neither the publisher nor author shall be liable for any loss of profit or any other commercial damages, including but not limited to special, incidental, consequential, or other damages.
    [Show full text]